So I read dogs like squeaky toys because it it reminds them of an injured animal. Let’s hear some more.
@peter4jc, make sure you stock up on black and white paint for the Milwaukee herf. I dont want no mosquito bites.
“You’d get some people angry if you grew potatoes in Neil Armstrong’s poo.” Biologist Kelly Weinersmith, co-author of a book on human settlements in space, explains that the bags of waste left behind on the Moon would make good fertilizer for lunar soil — if NASA didn’t regard them as heritage. (Nature Podcast | 38 min listen)
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01158-6
"About one-third of Americans under 30 regularly get their news from it." (TikTok)
@silvermouse said: "About one-third of Americans under 30 regularly get their news from it." (TikTok)
Doesn't surprise me.
There's a 1:20 scale replica of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, TN.
@Yakster said: There's a 1:20 scale replica of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, TN.
I'll send you a picture, once the Fish Fry is over. Too many people there this week.
Not picking on you necessarily but, There’s a lot of useful information being posted in this thread lately.
I hope this is not useful, because of my last post but I’ll let you all be the judge of it.
Turned on the television and first thing I see is this. I didn’t know this but he’s “The Cow Guy” and now you know it. I think he and Trump use the same makeup.
I would rate that 'Somewhat useless' @Bob_Luken, the guy might consider stripes, aka the Milwaukee Herf dress code, this time of year
In common speech it is a useless distinction since enough people use these words interchangeably, ok? @Bob_Luken ?
lay is transitive and requires an object to act upon, and lie is intransitive, describing something moving on its own or already in position. Beyond the present tense, the pair can become more confusing because lay is the past tense of lie, and laid is the past tense of lay.
On April 18 1930, the BBC's evening news report simply said "there is no news" and then played piano music for the entire segment.
They're too busy making news up for music these days.
@silvermouse said: On April 18 1930, the BBC's evening news report simply said "there is no news" and then played piano music for the entire segment.
Wish they would do that again!
There’s one at Kings Island in Cincinnati also
If you add onion powder, garlic powder and Italian seasoning to chef boyardee beef ravioli, it's pretty good.
Hangover cure? Did you have to open the shop this morning?
Fortunately I didn't. My son got there on time. No hangover, surprisingly. Just tired.
A town in England dropped apostrophes from its street signs. Some residents aren’t happy.
What’s a hangover?
On average 100 people choke to death on ball point pens every year.
Warp speed is the speed of light. 186,000 miles per second. Warp 9 is 1,674,000 miles per second. I guess that’s fast
How to make a pleasant shower unpleasant
https://www.upworthy.com/artist-creates-amazing-inflatable-shower-curtain-to-help-save-water-rp2
@silvermouse said: How to make a pleasant shower unpleasant https://www.upworthy.com/artist-creates-amazing-inflatable-shower-curtain-to-help-save-water-rp2
@silvermouse said: How to make a pleasant shower unpleasant
That'll be a moldy mess in no time, or is it plume?
The word millennium has two N's in the middle, because it comes from the Latin word for "year", annus.
If you spell it with one N, this changes annus to *a**s*, which makes it mean not "a thousand years" but rather "a thousand a******s".
A woodpeckers tongue wraps around its brain to protect it when it’s hammering into a tree.
@Rhamlin said: A woodpeckers tongue wraps around its brain to protect it when it’s hammering into a tree.
Reminds me of a girl I once knew. She would...well, never mind.
That's a lot of people...
"The U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) said it screened 2.95 million airline passengers on Friday, the highest number ever on a single day."
And the amount of weapons and drugs that made it through would surprise you, too.
Thomas Edison stole the ideas for most of the inventions he’s credited for. A true POS