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Post by spindle on Apr 6, 2006 17:23:55 GMT -5
Alot of you may know this already but it still makes me smile.
"Evian" spelled backwards is naive.
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Post by ythai on Apr 7, 2006 13:22:43 GMT -5
LOL I was just thinking of that this morning!!! too funny!
~Y~
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Post by corna on Apr 9, 2006 8:10:26 GMT -5
whats evian mean?
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Post by spindle on Apr 9, 2006 8:36:25 GMT -5
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Post by spindle on Apr 10, 2006 7:47:09 GMT -5
The number of the trash compactor in Star Wars (20th Century Fox, 1977) is 3263827.
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Post by spindle on Apr 18, 2006 6:43:24 GMT -5
Geller and Huchra have made three-dimensional maps of the distribution of galaxies. In each layer of the map some galaxies are grouped together in such a way that they resemble a human being. cfa-www.harvard.edu/~huchra/zcat/
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Post by spindle on Apr 25, 2006 13:23:09 GMT -5
There are earthworms as short as one-twenty-fifth of an inch and earthworms as long as 11 feet. The earthworm has no lungs; it breathes through its skin. some earthworms have as many as ten hearts.
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Post by ythai on Apr 26, 2006 22:02:12 GMT -5
that's just ugh!
~Y~
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Post by spindle on May 3, 2006 7:39:05 GMT -5
jiffy The term jiffy refers to a brief, usually unspecified, interval of time. In scientific and lay applications, it can refer to any of several specific time spans. The most common interpretation is 0.01 second. In computer engineering, the length of time between successive microprocessor clock cycles is sometimes called a jiffy. This interval gets shorter as clock speeds increase. In a computer with a 2-gigahertz microprocessor, the jiffy is 0.5 nanosecond or 5 x 10-10 second. In a machine with a 3-gigahertz microprocessor, the jiffy is 0.333 nanosecond (3.33 x 10-10 second). In some circles, the length of time required for one alternating-current (AC) utility power cycle is called a jiffy. In the United States and Canada, this is 1/60 second. In many other countries, it is 1/50 second. In some publications, the term jiffy refers to 0.001 second. In others, it corresponds to the length of time required for a beam of light to travel one foot in free space; this is approximately 1 nanosecond. In still others, it refers to 3.3357 times 10-11 seconds, which is the length of time it takes a ray of light to travel 1 centimeter in free space. Perhaps the most interesting interpretation is the one suggested by Richard Tolman early in the 20th century. He considered a jiffy to be the length of time it takes a photon (light particle) to travel from one side of a nucleon (neutron or proton) to the other. A nucleon has a diameter of about 10-15 meter; a jiffy in this context is a paltry 3.3357 x 10-24 second. The origin of the term jiffy is unknown. It is thought to have first been used in England during the 1700s, and referred to a brief but indeterminate time. But in some contexts, it is used as a put-off: the expression in a jiffy can mean "maybe now, maybe never."
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Post by ythai on May 3, 2006 22:59:23 GMT -5
You either have WAY too much time on your hands, or you're playing hooky from work again.
~Y~
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Post by spindle on May 19, 2006 8:39:55 GMT -5
The expression "freeze the balls off a brass monkey" is a naval term when cannon balls were stored on a "monkey" which in very cold temperatures because it was made of brass contracted more than the cannon balls and made them fall off!
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Post by spindle on Mar 15, 2007 8:21:18 GMT -5
There are more Irish in New York City than in Dublin, Ireland; more Italians in New York City than in Rome, Italy; and more Jews in New York City than in Tel Aviv, Israel.
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