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Trivia

Posted: May 23rd, 2009, 1:59 am
by TexasImprovMassacre
An octopus has 3 hearts.

Posted: May 23rd, 2009, 2:39 am
by TexasImprovMassacre
a new pencil could draw a line 35 miles long

Posted: May 23rd, 2009, 10:24 am
by Chelley
The word email is both singular and plural.

Posted: May 23rd, 2009, 11:17 am
by ChrisTrew.Com
thread over

Re: Trivia

Posted: May 23rd, 2009, 12:07 pm
by hujhax
TexasImprovMassacre wrote:An octopus has 3 hearts.
Octopuses and goats are two of the only animals that have rectangular pupils.

:mrgreen:

--
peter rogers @ home | http://hujhax.livejournal.com

I spent the middle year of the project reading: it is how I should have spent the first.
      -- Graham Nelson, on designing Inform

Posted: May 23rd, 2009, 1:09 pm
by York99
A duck's quack does not echo.

Posted: May 23rd, 2009, 2:46 pm
by arthursimone
by some sources, who put his age at 11, the youngest Pope ever was Benedict IX...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Benedict_IX

Posted: May 23rd, 2009, 2:56 pm
by hujhax
York99 wrote:A duck's quack does not echo.
SNOPES'D!

:mrgreen:

--
peter rogers @ home | http://hujhax.livejournal.com

Telling someone, "You ought to watch The Wire -- it's worth the time," is like telling them, "You know what game you'd really enjoy? Chess."
      -- 'nicanor', at http://mattzollerseitz.blogspot.com/

Posted: May 24th, 2009, 12:18 am
by York99
hujhax wrote:
York99 wrote:A duck's quack does not echo.
SNOPES'D!
Oh, you want TRUE trivia?

Revolving doors were invented to prevent horses from entering establishments.

[maybe]

Posted: May 24th, 2009, 2:58 am
by Mike
The Superior Vena Cava has 2 liters of blood flow through it every minute.

Posted: May 24th, 2009, 9:36 pm
by scook
The opening four notes of Beethoven's 5th Symphony is the morse code for the letter "V" and therefore associated with "victory" of war.

Posted: May 24th, 2009, 11:50 pm
by EmilyBee
While we're on music, the augmented 4th, or minor 5th, the TRITONE, was long considered to be the Devil's interval, and most music from the Baroque period until the late 19th/early 20th Century used the dissonance of the tritone to propel harmonic progressions to the tonic. Stay on a tritone, and your ears start to itch, aching for a resolution!

Of course, all that has changed since the traditional tonal system was set, so to speak, on its ear by the "modern" music trend, which embraced atonality and the influence of music from non-European cultures (with the increasing knowledge of the "orient" fostered by events such as the World's Fair, influencing music of the classical tradition as well as the infant art form jazz).

Long before Bach helped cement the Classical function of the tritone, Carlo Gesualdo, a nobleman composer of Renaissance motets, luxuriated in the crunchy ear-buzziness of the tritone, minor seventh, ninth, and other intervals--especially after he murdered his cousin/wife and her lover in flagrante delicto and left their mutilated bodies on display in front of his castle.

Geek out.

Posted: May 25th, 2009, 12:36 am
by sara farr
Roly Poly "bugs" are land-walking (terrestrial) crustacean with modified gills ... and they carry their young in a pouch.*

(*Source: Beth Burn's kid, Sloane. She told me & Vines all about it today after her mom's show, "Hansel & Gretel".)

Posted: May 25th, 2009, 9:02 am
by EmilyBee
sara_anm8r wrote:Roly Poly "bugs" are land-walking (terrestrial) crustacean with modified gills ... and they carry their young in a pouch.*
all about it today after her mom's show, "Hansel & Gretel".)
I heart this.

Posted: May 25th, 2009, 11:07 am
by LuBu McJohnson
Shits that I give = 0

[JAYKAY!]