BaZmO* wrote: » This post is the 10,000th post
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » I'm not sure if this is related to the above, but I have on a few occasions tried to pay for things in England using NI banknotes and they've been refused, same with Isle of Man notes. It's like the English ones are the only ones everyone seems to accept and otherwise it seems to be optional. Never could understand why they would have a system as cumbersome and pointless as that: either make them all legal tender across the board, or stop issuing notes that are only useful on a tiny island in the middle of the Irish sea or whatever.
Gloomtastic! wrote: » “ What’s classed as legal tender varies throughout the UK. In England and Wales, it’s Royal Mint coins and Bank of England notes. In Scotland and Northern Ireland it’s only Royal Mint coins and not banknotes.” So those dodgy bank notes up North are not legal tender?
secondrowgal wrote: » I didn’t know this but loadsa money in the UK isn’t “legal tender”:https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/knowledgebank/what-is-legal-tender
Ash.J.Williams wrote: » All time rock n roll classic "tutti Frutti" by little Richard was originally about anal sex
sbsquarepants wrote: » Another random black hole fact i just stumbled across...
Ipso wrote: » Hmm. A post described as "another black hole fact" posted after a post about anal sex.
sbsquarepants wrote: » Another random black hole fact i just stumbled across on twitter. The largest known black hole has a mass of 20billion suns and dwarfs our solar system:eek:https://twitter.com/ZonePhysics/status/1196724279276134400?s=08
LostinBlanch wrote: » Up until 1987 no TV was broadcast in Iceland on Thursdays. This was done as a way of keeping one day a week only for socialising. As a result many Icelanders joke that they were conceived on a Thursday.
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » Englishman Arthur John Priest worked as a stoker for the White Star Line in the 1910s. In 1911 he was working on the RMS Olympic when she collided with the HMS Hawke and was holed below the waterline, flooding two of her watertight compartments. In April 1912 he was part of the crew of the Titanic on its fateful maiden voyage. In 1916 he was aboard the Britannic when it struck a mine off the Greek isles and sank. In 1917 he'd cheat death once again by surviving the sinking of the hospital ship 'Donegal' in the English Channel. A nurse by the name of Violet Jessop has the same story. She was working aboard all 3 White Star Line ships at the time of their incidents and survived to tell the tale.
Chancer3001 wrote: » Cleopatra lived closer to the iphone than the building of the pyramids. Broccoli doesnt exist in the wild. We bred it for human consumption.
KevRossi wrote: » Was watching the news in Spain this morning and the word ‘Nevada’ came up on the ticker during the weather forecast. It’s Spanish for ‘snowfall’. You learn something new every day.
Squall Leonhart wrote: » The word is overused, and used inappropriately at times, but... space is awesome. Just awesome.