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 Post subject: Bet You Didn't Know This! (Wikipedia style)
PostPosted: Sun Nov 19, 2006 8:59 pm 
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Simple: quote something random from Wikipedia that you found extremely interesting and doubt that many people would know. You can post anything as long as it abides by our rules, of course.

Article about Earth's gravity wrote:
The acceleration due to gravity at the Earth's surface, denoted g, is approximately 9.8 m/s² (metres per second squared) or 32 ft/s². This means that, ignoring air resistance, an object falling freely near the earth's surface increases in speed by 9.8 m/s (around 22 mph) for each second of its descent. Thus, an object starting from rest will attain a speed of 9.8 m/s after one second, 19.6 m/s after two seconds, and so on. The earth itself experiences an equal and opposite force to that of the falling object, meaning that the earth also accelerates towards the object. However, because of the immense mass of the earth this acceleration is vanishingly small.


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PostPosted: Sun Nov 19, 2006 11:59 pm 
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Striped toothpaste can be produced by including two different colored toothpastes in an unusual type of packaging. The collapsible tube has two tanks, one filled with each color paste (see figure). Squeezing the tube pushes the two pastes out the opening. The tube nozzle layers the pastes to produce a striped pattern.

To keep the cost of packaging to a minimum, it is now common for tubes to be filled with striped paste (e.g. Aquafresh).[4] As the tube is squeezed, the stripes flow parallel to each other and do not mix. The patterned paste that gets dipensed is simply a narrower version of what is in the tube. Filling is done using a multi-nozzle filling head that dispenses a different colored stripe in each direction. To keep the stripes parallel to the axis of the tube, the head starts at the bottom and retracts as it fills, staying just above the level of the paste. Tubes with two compartments are generally reserved for toothpastes containing two formulas intended to react together and therefore kept isolated until dispensed (e.g. Colgate Simply White).


This is so interesting. xD


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 12:21 am 
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Lemurs are found naturally only on the island of Madagascar and some smaller surrounding islands, including the Comoros (where it is likely they were introduced by humans).Fossil evidence indicates that they made their way across the ocean after Madagascar broke away from the continent of Africa. While their ancestors were displaced in the rest of the world by monkeys, apes, and other primates, the lemurs were safe from competition on Madagascar and differentiated into a number of species. These range in size from the tiny 30 gram Pygmy Mouse Lemur to the 10 kilogram Indri. The larger species have all become extinct since humans settled on Madagascar, and since the early 20th century the largest lemurs reach about 7 kilograms. Typically, the smaller lemurs are active at night (nocturnal), while the larger ones are active during the day (diurnal).

The small cheirogaleoids are generally omnivores, eating a variety of fruits, flowers and leaves (and sometimes nectar) as well as insects, spiders and small vertebrates. The remainder of the lemurs, the lemuroids are primarily herbivores, although some species supplement their diet with insects.


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 6:58 am 
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Snakes (from Old English snaca, and ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European base *snag- or *sneg-, "to crawl"), also known as ophidians, are cold-blooded legless reptiles closely related to lizards, which share the order Squamata. There are also several species of legless lizard which superficially resemble snakes, but are not otherwise related to them. A love of snakes is called ophiophilia, a fear of snakes is called ophidiophobia. A specialist in snakes is an ophiologist.


Haha I like the fear and love of snakes part. Hmm, I should call myself an ophiophilia! :D


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 10:24 pm 
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You would call yourself an ophiophilist, a person who has ophiophilia.

Here is my favorite new info of the week with a bunch of examples (because the explanation is a little murky):

Zeugma (from the Greek word "ζεύγμα", meaning "yoke") is a figure of speech describing the joining of two or more parts of a sentence with a common verb or noun. A zeugma employs both ellipsis, the omission of words which are easily understood, and parallelism, the balance of several words or phrases. The result is a series of similar phrases joined or yoked together by a common and implied noun or verb.
Quote:
Prozeugma: a zeugma where a verb in the first part of a sentence governs several later clauses in series.
prozeugma wrote:
She conquered shame with passion, fear with audacity, reason with madness

Chiasmus: a set of sentences where, in the first sentence, a verb at the END of the sentence applies to multiple clauses following it [hypozeugma], and in the second sentence, a verb at the BEGINNING of the sentence applies to multiple clauses preceding it [prozeugma].
chiasmus wrote:
The foundation of freedom and the fountain of equity is preserved by laws. Our lawless acts destroy our wealth and threaten our custody of life.)

Diazeugma: the same noun applies to multiple verbs in the same sentence
diazeugma wrote:
The Roman people destroyed Numantia, razed Carthage, demolished Corinth, and overthrew Fregella.

Despairing in the heat and in the sun, we marched, cursing in the rain and in the cold.

But here's the best part.
Quote:
Syllepsis is the term given to a zeugma when the clauses are not parallel either in meaning or grammar. They are figures of speech in which one word simultaneously modifies two or more other words such that the modification must be understood differently with respect to each modified word.
In other words... One verb, one sentence, two nouns that go with it and the verb is used differently with each noun.

Syllepsis wrote:
He carried a strobe light and the responsibility for the lives of his men.

Are you getting fit or having one?

He broke the record and a leg.

he hastened to put out the cat, the wine, his cigar and the lamps.

If we don't hang together, we shall hang separately.


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 10:32 pm 
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The first dated account of the Taco was written by Bernal Diaz del Castillo in 1520 in his chronicles called A True History of the Conquest of New Spain.


mmmmm....taco


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 20, 2006 10:54 pm 
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Article about Banshee wrote:
The Banshee (IPA: [ˈbænʃiː]) is a creature in Irish mythology and known as Bean Nighe in Scottish mythology, the word being derived from the Old Irish ben síde, modern Irish bean sídhe or bean sí, "fairy woman" (bean, woman, and sidhe, being the tuiseal ginideach or possessive case of "fairy"). The sídh are derived from pre-Christian Gaelic deities.

Traditionally, when a citizen of an Irish village died, a woman would sing a lament or modern Irish caoineadh (pronounced [kwi:nʲə]) at their funeral. These women singers are sometimes referred to as "keeners". Legend has it that, for five great Gaelic families: the O'Gradys, the O'Neills, the O'Briens, the O'Connors, and the Kavanaghs, the lament would be sung by a fairy woman. These families had a fairy woman associated with them, who would make an appearance after a death in the family to sing this lament. Tales recount how, when the family member had died far away then the appearance or, in some tales, the sound of the fairy keener, might be the first intimation of the death.

When these oral narratives were first translated into English, a distinction between the "banshee" and other fairy folk was introduced which does not seem to exist in the original stories in their original (Irish or Scottish) Gaelic forms. Similarly, the funeral lament became a mournful cry or wail by which the death is heralded. In these tales, hearing the banshee's wail came to predict a death in the family and seeing the banshee portends one's own death.

Banshees are frequently dressed in white and often have long, fair hair which they brush with a silver comb, a detail scholar Patricia Lysaght attributes to confusion with local mermaid myths. This comb detail is also related to the centuries-old traditional romantic Irish story that, if you ever see a comb lying on the ground in Ireland, you must never pick it up, or the banshees (or mermaids - stories vary), having placed it there to lure unsuspecting humans, will spirit such gullible humans away. Other stories portray banshees as dressed in green or black with a grey cloak.

Banshees were common in Irish and Scottish folk stories such as those written down by Herminie T. Kavanagh. They enjoy the same mythical status in Ireland as fairies and leprechauns.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 3:06 am 
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Quote:
DeYoung was further hindered due to a viral illness which made him excessively sensitive to light, and asked his fellow band members to delay the start of any tour.
Chuck Panozzo left the band in 1998 after telling his bandmates he was gay and battling HIV. (His public explanation came in 2001 at the annual Human Rights Campaign banquet.)

Later that year, before DeYoung could return from his illness, he was replaced by Lawrence Gowan.


Styx rules.


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PostPosted: Tue Nov 21, 2006 8:46 am 
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A wolphin or wholphin is a rare hybrid, formed from a cross between a bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus (mother), and a false killer whale Pseudorca crassidens (father). Although they have been reported to exist in the wild, there are currently only two in captivity, both at the Sea Life Park in Hawaii.

The first captive wolphin (whale/dolphin) hybrid occurred in captivity in 1985 where a female bottlenose dolphin and a male false killer whale shared a pool. The wolphin's size, colour and shape are intermediate between the parent species. Named Kekaimalu, she has 66 teeth - intermediate between a bottlenose (88 teeth) and false killer whale (44 teeth). The wolphin proved fertile when she gave birth at a very young age. The calf died after a few days. However, in 1991, Kekaimalu gave birth once again, to daughter Pohaikealoha in 1991. For 2 years she cared for the calf, but did not nurse it (it was hand-reared by trainers). Pohaikealoha died at age 9. On December 23, 2004, Kekaimalu had her third calf, daughter Kawili Kai, sired by a male bottlenose. This calf did nurse and was very playful. Only months after birth, it was the size of a 1-year-old bottlenose dolphin.

Both remain in captivity, and are not part of the normal tour at Sea Life Park. The backstage tour must be taken to see the wolphins. :(

Wolphins, though not commonly sighted by fishermen, are known in popular seafaring lore as "The Great Grey Beast".

Although the word 'wolphin' is a portmanteau of whale and dolphin, since false killer whales are members of the family Delphinidae, that is, dolphins and not true whales, the wolphin is a kind of dolphin. For more detail on the ambiguity of the term, see whale. Herds of false killer whales and bottlenose dolphins associate together in the wild and there are unsubstantiated reports of natural hybrids between the two species.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 6:35 pm 
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Cursive is any style of handwriting in which all the letters in a word are connected, making a word one single (complicated) stroke. In British English, the phrase "joined-up writing" is far more commonly used, while the term "running writing" is sometimes used in Australia. Cursive is considered distinct from the so-called "printing" or "block letter" style of handwriting, in which the letters of a word are unconnected, and from "print-writing", which is a cross between cursive and printing, with some unconnected letters and some connected.


I thought that was kinda interesting.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 22, 2006 7:35 pm 
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Spock Article wrote:
The Vulcan peace sign (the Vulcan salute), employed by Spock, is a modification of the sign used by Kohens, the Jewish priestly class. Actor Leonard Nimoy devised this gesture and the accompanying greeting ("Live long and prosper," "Peace and long life") based on his own Jewish heritage.


I heart Star Trek. Live Long and Prosper, eh.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 23, 2006 5:41 pm 
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Article about Werecats wrote:

In folklore and fantasy fiction, Werecats are shapeshifters who are similar to werewolves, except that they turn into some species of feline instead of a wolf. The species involved can be a domestic cat, a tiger, a lion, a leopard, a lynx, or any other type, including some that are purely fantastical felines. Typically, an individual werecat can only transform to one unique feline, not to a number of different species. The word "werecat" was not coined until the late 19th century, so it was not directly used in legends from earlier eras, only by later folklorists' commentary.


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