1.
It is impossible to lick your elbow
2.
A crocodile can't stick it's tongue out.
3.
A shrimp's heart is in it's head.
4.
People say "Bless you" when you sneeze because when you
sneeze,your heart stops for a mili-second.
5.
In a study of 200,000 ostriches over a period of 80 years, no one
reported a single case where an ostrich buried its head in the sand.
6.
It is physically impossible for pigs to look up into the sky.
7.
A pregnant goldfish is called a twit.
8.
More than 50% of the people in the world have never made or
received a telephone call.
9.
Rats and horses can't vomit.
10.
If you sneeze too hard, you can fracture a rib.
11.
If you try to suppress a sneeze, you can rupture a blood vessel in
your head or neck and die.
12.
If you keep your eyes open by force when you sneeze, you might pop
an eyeball out.
13.
Rats multiply so quickly that in 18 months, two rats could have
over a million descendants.
14.
Wearing headphones for just an hour will increase the bacteria in
your ear by 700 times.
15.
In every episode of Seinfeld there is a Superman somewhere.
16.
The cigarette lighter was invented before the match.
17.
Thirty-five percent of the people who use personal ads for dating
are already married.
18.
A duck's quack doesn't echo, and no one knows why.
19.
23% of all photocopier faults worldwide are caused by people sitting
on them and photocopying their butts.
20.
In the course of an average lifetime you will, while sleeping, eat
70 assorted insects and 10 spiders.
21.
Most lipstick contains fish scales.
22.
Like fingerprints, everyone's tongue print is different.
23.
Over 75% of people who read this will try to lick their elbow.
24.
A crocodile can't move its tongue and cannot chew. Its digestive
juices are so strong that it can digest a steel nail.
25.
Money notes are not made from paper, they are made mostly from a
special blend of cotton and linen. In 1932, when a shortage of cash occurred in
Tenino, Washington, USA, notes were made out of wood for a brief period.
26.
The Grammy Awards were introduced to counter the threat of rock
music. In the late 1950s, a group of record executives were alarmed by the
explosive success of rock ‘n roll, considering it a threat to
"quality" music.
27.
Tea is said to have been discovered in 2737 BC by a Chinese
emperor when some tea leaves accidentally blew into a pot of boiling water. The
tea bag was introduced in 1908 by Thomas Sullivan of New York.
28.
Over the last 150 years the average height of people in
industrialised nations has increased 10 cm (about 4 inches). In the 19th
century, American men were the tallest in the world, averaging 1,71m
(5'6"). Today, the average height for American men is 1,75m (5'7"),
compared to 1,77 (5'8") for Swedes, and 1,78 (5'8.5") for the Dutch.
The tallest nation in the world is the Watusis of Burundi.
29.
In 1955 the richest woman in the world was Mrs Hetty Green Wilks,
who left an estate of $95 million in a will that was found in a tin box with
four pieces of soap. Queen Elizabeth of Britain and Queen Beatrix of the
Netherlands count under the 10 wealthiest women in the world.
30.
Joseph Niepce developed the world's first photographic image in
1827. Thomas Edison and W K L Dickson introduced the film camera in 1894. But
the first projection of an image on a screen was made by a German priest. In
1646, Athanasius Kircher used a candle or oil lamp to project hand-painted
images onto a white screen.
31.
In 1935 a writer named Dudley Nichols refused to accept the Oscar
for his movie The Informer because the Writers Guild was on strike against the
movie studios. In 1970 George C. Scott refused the Best Actor Oscar for Patton.
In 1972 Marlon Brando refused the Oscar for his role in The Godfather.
32.
The system of democracy was introduced 2 500 years ago in Athens,
Greece. The oldest existing governing body operates in Althing in Iceland. It
was established in 930 AD.
33.
A person can live without food for about a month, but only about a
week without water.
If the amount of water in your body is reduced by just 1%, you'll feel thirsty.
If it's reduced by 10%, you'll die.
If the amount of water in your body is reduced by just 1%, you'll feel thirsty.
If it's reduced by 10%, you'll die.
34.
According to a study by the Economic Research Service, 27% of all
food production in Western nations ends up in garbage cans. Yet, 1,2 billion
people are underfed - the same number of people who are overweight.
35.
Camels are called "ships of the desert" because of the way
they move, not because of their transport capabilities. A Dromedary camel has
one hump and a Bactrian camel two humps. The humps are used as fat storage.
Thus, an undernourished camel will not have a hump.
36.
In the Durango desert, in Mexico, there's a creepy spot called the
"Zone of Silence." You can't pick up clear TV or radio signals. And
locals say fireballs sometimes appear in the sky.
37.
Ethernet is a registered trademark of Xerox, Unix is a registered
trademark of AT&T.
38.
Bill Gates' first business was Traff-O-Data, a company that
created machines which recorded the number of cars passing a given point on a
road.
39.
Uranus' orbital axis is tilted at 90 degrees.
40.
The final resting-place for Dr. Eugene Shoemaker - the Moon. The
famed U.S. Geological Survey astronomer, trained the Apollo astronauts about
craters, but never made it into space. Mr. Shoemaker had wanted to be an
astronaut but was rejected because of a medical problem. His ashes were placed
on board the Lunar Prospector spacecraft before it was launched on January 6,
1998. NASA crashed the probe into a crater on the moon in an attempt to learn
if there is water on the moon.
41.
Outside the USA, Ireland is the largest software producing country
in the world.
42.
The first fossilized specimen of Australopithecus afarenisis was
named Lucy after the paleontologists' favorite song "Lucy in the Sky with
Diamonds," by the Beatles.
43.
Figlet, an ASCII font converter program, stands for Frank, Ian and
Glenn's LETters.
44.
Every human spent about half an hour as a single cell.
45.
Every year about 98% of atoms in your body are replaced.
46.
Hot water is heavier than cold.
47.
Plutonium - first weighed on August 20th, 1942, by University of
Chicago scientists Glenn Seaborg and his colleagues - was the first man-made
element.
48.
If you went out into space, you would explode before you
suffocated because there's no air pressure.
49.
The radioactive substance, Americanium - 241 is used in many smoke
detectors.
50.
The original IBM-PCs, that had hard drives, referred to the hard
drives as Winchester drives. This is due to the fact that the original
Winchester drive had a model number of 3030. This is, of course, a Winchester
firearm.
51.
Sound travels 15 times faster through steel than through the air.
52.
On average, half of all false teeth have some form of radioactivity.
53.
Only one satellite has been ever been destroyed by a meteor: the
European Space Agency's Olympus in 1993.
54.
Starch is used as a binder in the production of paper. It is the
use of a starch coating that controls ink penetration when printing. Cheaper
papers do not use as much starch, and this is why your elbows get black when
you are leaning over your morning paper.
55.
Sterling silver is not pure silver. Because pure silver is too
soft to be used in most tableware it is mixed with copper in the proportion of
92.5 percent silver to 7.5 percent copper.
56.
A ball of glass will bounce higher than a ball of rubber. A ball
of solid steel will bounce higher than one made entirely of glass.
57.
A chip of silicon a quarter-inch square has the capacity of the
original 1949 ENIAC computer, which occupied a city block.
58.
An ordinary TNT bomb involves atomic reaction, and could be called
an atomic bomb. What we call an A-bomb involves nuclear reactions and should be
called a nuclear bomb.
59.
At a glance, the Celsius scale makes more sense than the
Fahrenheit scale for temperature measuring. But its creator, Anders Celsius,
was an oddball scientist. When he first developed his scale, he made freezing
100 degrees and boiling 0 degrees, or upside down. No one dared point this out
to him, so fellow scientists waited until Celsius died to change the scale.
60.
At a jet plane's speed of 1,000 km (620mi) per hour, the length of
the plane becomes one atom shorter than its original length.
61.
The first full moon to occur on the winter solstice, Dec. 22,
commonly called the first day of winter, happened in 1999. Since a full moon on
the winter solstice occurred in conjunction with a lunar perigee (point in the
moon's orbit that is closest to Earth), the moon appeared about 14% larger than
it does at apogee (the point in it's elliptical orbit that is farthest from the
Earth).
Since the Earth is also several million miles closer to the sun at that time of the year than in the summer, sunlight striking the moon was about 7% stronger making it brighter. Also, this was the closest perigee of the Moon of the year since the moon's orbit is constantly deforming. In places where the weather was clear and there was a snow cover, even car headlights were superfluous.
Since the Earth is also several million miles closer to the sun at that time of the year than in the summer, sunlight striking the moon was about 7% stronger making it brighter. Also, this was the closest perigee of the Moon of the year since the moon's orbit is constantly deforming. In places where the weather was clear and there was a snow cover, even car headlights were superfluous.
62.
According to security equipment specialists, security systems that
utilize motion detectors won't function properly if walls and floors are too
hot. When an infrared beam is used in a motion detector, it will pick up a
person's body temperature of 98.6 degrees compared to the cooler walls and
floor.
If the room is too hot, the motion detector won't register a change in the radiated heat of that person's body when it enters the room and breaks the infrared beam. Your home's safety might be compromised if you turn your air conditioning off or set the thermostat too high while on summer vacation.
If the room is too hot, the motion detector won't register a change in the radiated heat of that person's body when it enters the room and breaks the infrared beam. Your home's safety might be compromised if you turn your air conditioning off or set the thermostat too high while on summer vacation.
63.
Western Electric successfully brought sound to motion pictures and
introduced systems of mobile communications which culminated in the cellular
telephone.
64.
On December 23, 1947, Bell Telephone Laboratories in Murray Hill,
N.J., held a secret demonstration of the transistor which marked the foundation
of modern electronics.
65.
The wick of a trick candle has small amounts of magnesium in them.
When you light the candle, you are also lighting the magnesium. When someone
tries to blow out the flame, the magnesium inside the wick continues to burn
and, in just a split second (or two or three), relights the wick.
66.
Ostriches are often not taken seriously. They can run faster than
horses, and the males can roar like lions.
67.
Seals used for their fur get extremely sick when taken aboard
ships.
68.
Sloths take two weeks to digest their food.
69.
Guinea pigs and rabbits can't sweat.
70.
The pet food company Ralston Purina recently introduced, from its
subsidiary Purina Philippines, power chicken feed designed to help roosters
build muscles for cockfighting, which is popular in many areas of the world.
71.
According to the Wall Street Journal, the cockfighting market is
huge: The Philippines has five million roosters used for exactly that.
72.
Sharks and rays are the only animals known to man that don't get
cancer. Scientists believe this has something to do with the fact that they
don't have bones, but cartilage.
73.
The porpoise is second to man as the most intelligent animal on
the planet.
74.
Young beavers stay with their parents for the first two years of
their lives before going out on their own.
75.
Skunks can accurately spray their smelly fluid as far as ten feet.
76.
Deer can't eat hay.
77.
Gopher snakes in Arizona are not poisonous, but when frightened
they may hiss and shake their tails like rattlesnakes.
78.
On average, dogs have better eyesight than humans, although not as
colorful.
79.
The duckbill platypus can store as many as six hundred worms in
the pouches of its cheeks.
80.
The lifespan of a squirrel is about nine years.
81.
North American oysters do not make pearls of any value.
82.
Human birth control pills work on gorillas.
83.
Many sharks lay eggs, but hammerheads give birth to live babies
that look like very small duplicates of their parents. Young hammerheads are
usually born headfirst, with the tip of their hammer-shaped head folded
backward to make them more streamlined for birth.
84.
Gorillas sleep as much as fourteen hours per day.
85.
A biological reserve has been made for golden toads because they
are so rare.
86.
There are more than fifty different kinds of kangaroos.
87.
Jellyfish like salt water. A rainy season often reduces the jellyfish
population by putting more fresh water into normally salty waters where they
live.
88.
The female lion does ninety percent of the hunting.
89.
The odds of seeing three albino deer at once are one in
seventy-nine billion, yet one man in Boulder Junction, Wisconsin, took a
picture of three albino deer in the woods.
90.
A group of twelve or more cows is called a flink.
91.
Cats often rub up against people and furniture to lay their scent
and mark their territory. They do it this way, as opposed to the way dogs do
it, because they have scent glands in their faces.
92.
Cats sleep up to eighteen hours a day, but never quite as deep as
humans. Instead, they fall asleep quickly and wake up intermittently to check
to see if their environment is still safe.
93.
Catnip, or Nepeta cataria, is an herb with nepetalactone in it.
Many think that when cats inhale nepetalactone, it affects hormones that arouse
sexual feelings, or at least alter their brain functioning to make them feel
"high." Catnip was originally made, using nepetalactone as a natural
bug repellant, but roaming cats would rip up the plants before they could be
put to their intended task.
94.
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans ages the equivalent of five
human years for every day they live, so they usually die after about fourteen
days. When stressed, though, the worm goes into a comatose state that can last
for two or more months. The human equivalent would be to sleep for about two
hundred years.
95.
You can tell the sex of a horse by its teeth. Most males have 40,
females have 36.
96.
(removed, duplicated)
97.
The 57 on Heinz ketchup bottle represents the varieties of pickle
the company once had.
98.
Your stomach produces a new layer of mucus every two weeks -
otherwise it will digest itself.
99.
The Declaration of Independence was written on hemp paper.
100.
A raisin dropped in a glass of fresh champagne will bounce up and
down continuously from the bottom of the glass to the top.
101.
Susan Lucci is the daughter of Phyllis Diller.
102.
(removed, duplicated)
103.
315 entries in Webster's 1996 Dictionary were misspelled.
104.
On average, 12 newborns will be given to the wrong parents daily.
105.
During the chariot scene in 'Ben Hur' a small red car can be seen
in the distance.
106.
Warren Beatty and Shirley MacLaine are brother and sister.
107.
Orcas (killer whales) kill sharks by torpedoing up into the
shark's stomach from underneath, causing the shark to explode.
108.
(removed, duplicated)
109.
Donald Duck comics were banned from Finland because he doesn't
wear any pants.
110.
Ketchup was sold in the 1830s as medicine.
111.
Upper and lower case letters are named 'upper' and 'lower' because
in the time when all original print had to be set in individual letters, the
'upper case' letters were stored in the case on top of the case that stored the
smaller, 'lower case' letters.
112.
Leonardo da Vinci could write with one hand and draw with the
other at the same time.
113.
Because metal was scarce, the Oscars given out during World War II
were made of wood.
114.
There are no clocks in Las Vegas gambling casinos.
115.
The name Wendy was made up for the book Peter Pan, there was never
a recorded Wendy before!
116.
There are no words in the dictionary that rhyme with: orange,
purple, and silver!
117.
Leonardo Da Vinci invented scissors.
118.
A tiny amount of liquor on a scorpion will make it instantly go
mad and sting itself to death.
119.
The mask used by Michael Myers in the original
"Halloween" was a Captain Kirk mask painted white.
120.
If you have three quarters, four dimes, and four pennies, you have
$1.19. You also have the largest amount of money in coins without being able to
make change for a dollar.
121.
Celery has negative calories! It takes more calories to eat a
piece of celery than the celery has in it to begin with. It's the same with
apples!
122.
Chewing gum while peeling onions will keep you from crying!
123.
The glue on Israeli postage stamps is certified kosher.
124.
Guinness Book of Records holds the record for being the book most
often stolen from Public Libraries.
125.
Astronauts are not allowed to eat beans before they go into space
because passing wind in a space suit damages them.
126.
The word "queue" is the only word in the English
language that is still pronounced the same way when the last four letters are
removed.
127.
Beetles taste like apples, wasps like pine nuts, and worms like
fried bacon.
128.
Of all the words in the English language, the word ’set’ has the
most definitions!
129.
What is called a "French kiss" in the English speaking
world is known as an "English kiss" in France.
130.
"Almost" is the longest word in the English language
with all the letters in alphabetical order.
131.
"Rhythm" is the longest English word without a vowel.
132.
In 1386, a pig in France was executed by public hanging for the
murder of a child
133.
(removed, duplicated)
134.
Human thigh bones are stronger than concrete.
135.
You can’t kill yourself by holding your breath
136.
There is a city called Rome on every continent.
137.
It’s against the law to have a pet dog in Iceland.
138.
Your heart beats over 100,000 times a day.
139.
Horatio Nelson, one of England’s most illustrious admirals was
throughout his life, never able to find a cure for his sea-sickness.
140.
The skeleton of Jeremy Bentham is present at all important
meetings of the University of London
141.
Right handed people live, on average, nine years longer than
left-handed people
142.
Your ribs move about 5 million times a year, everytime you
breathe!
143.
The elephant is the only mammal that can’t jump!
144.
One quarter of the bones in your body, are in your feet!
145.
(removed, duplicated)
146.
The first known transfusion of blood was performed as early as
1667, when Jean-Baptiste, transfused two pints of blood from a sheep to a young
man
147.
Fingernails grow nearly 4 times faster than toenails!
148.
Most dust particles in your house are made from dead skin!
149.
The present population of 5 billion plus people of the world is
predicted to become 15 billion by 2080.
150.
Women blink nearly twice as much as men.
151.
Adolf Hitler was a vegetarian, and had only ONE testicle.
152.
Honey is the only food that does not spoil. Honey found in the
tombs of Egyptian pharaohs has been tasted by archaeologists and found edible.
153.
Months that begin on a Sunday will always have a "Friday the
13th."
154.
Coca-Cola would be green if colouring weren’t added to it.
155.
On average a hedgehog’s heart beats 300 times a minute.
156.
More people are killed each year from bees than from snakes.
157.
The average lead pencil will draw a line 35 miles long or write
approximately 50,000 English words.
158.
More people are allergic to cow’s milk than any other food.
159.
Camels have three eyelids to protect themselves from blowing sand.
160.
The placement of a donkey’s eyes in its’ heads enables it to see
all four feet at all times!
161.
The six official languages of the United Nations are: English,
French, Arabic, Chinese, Russian and Spanish.
162.
Earth is the only planet not named after a god.
163.
It’s against the law to burp, or sneeze in a church in Nebraska,
USA.
164.
You’re born with 300 bones, but by the time you become an adult,
you only have 206.
165.
Some worms will eat themselves if they can’t find any food!
166.
Dolphins sleep with one eye open!
167.
It is impossible to sneeze with your eyes open
168.
The worlds oldest piece of chewing gum is 9000 years old!
169.
The longest recorded flight of a chicken is 13 seconds
170.
Queen Elizabeth I regarded herself as a paragon of cleanliness.
She declared that she bathed once every three months, whether she needed it or
not
171.
Slugs have 4 noses.
172.
Owls are the only birds who can see the colour blue.
173.
A man named Charles Osborne had the hiccups for 69 years!
174.
A giraffe can clean its ears with its 21-inch tongue!
175.
The average person laughs 10 times a day!
176.
An ostrich’s eye is bigger than its brain
177.
If you yelled for 8 years, 7 months and 6 days you would have
produced enough sound energy to heat one cup of coffee.
178.
If you farted consistently for 6 years and 9 months, enough gas is
produced to create the energy of an atomic bomb.
179.
The human heart! creates enough pressure when it pumps out to the
body to squirt blood 30 feet.
180.
A pig's orgasm lasts 30 minutes.
181.
A cockroach will live for weeks without its head before it starves
to death
182.
Banging your head against a wall uses 150 calories a hour
183.
The male praying mantis cannot copulate while its head is attached
to its body. The female initiates sex by ripping the male's head off.
184.
The flea can jump 350 times its body length. It's like a human
jumping the length of a football field.
185.
The catfish has over 27,000 taste buds.
186.
Some lions mate over 50 times a day.
187.
Butterflies taste with their feet.
188.
The strongest muscle in the body is the tongue.
189.
A cat's urine glows under a black light.
190.
(removed, duplicated)
191.
Starfish have no brains.
192.
Polar bears are left-handed.
193.
Humans and dolphins are the only species that have sex for
pleasure.
194.
In France, it is legal to marry a dead
person (Contributed by Loes - 16 May 2015)
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