Originally posted by rookie54Psychic income in varying denominations depending on the level of difficulty.
pain iz just an illusion,
and so it iz with today...
now that i've answered YOUR question,
tell me how much does it pay???
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If you were to die tonight, where would you go?
Originally posted by Grampy BobbySince the question seems to spawn silence I answer:
Psychic income in varying denominations depending on the level of difficulty.
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If you were to die tonight, where would you go?
heaven I hope
What is the question to which the answer is 42?
16 Apr 12
Originally posted by kevcvs57Answer: It's about ... hm, here's a poem instead:
Answer: 'what is the meaning of Life the universe and everything' or 6 * 7
Question: Philosophy; whats all that about?
Do not all charms fly
At the mere touch of cold philosophy?
There was an awful rainbow once in heaven:
We know her woof, her texture; she is given
In the dull catalogue of common things.
Philosophy will clip an angel's wings,
Conquer all mysteries by rule and line,
Empty the haunted air, and gnomed mine
Unweave a rainbow.
—John Keats, "Lamia", II, lines 229-37, (1820)
Question: Why do German beer mugs have metal lids?
16 Apr 12
Originally posted by greenpawn34Clocks traditionally follow this sense of rotation because of the clock's predecessor: the sundial. Clocks with hands were first built in the Northern Hemisphere (see main article), and they were made to work like sundials. In order for a horizontal sundial to work (in the Northern Hemisphere), it must be placed looking southward. Then, when the Sun moves in the sky (east to south to west), the shadow cast on the opposite side of the sundial moves with the same sense of rotation (west to north to east). This is why hours were drawn in sundials in that manner, and why modern clocks have their numbers set in the same way.
It was stop beasty things from dropping into your beer
and giving you the plague.
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Who decided clocks go clockwise?
{wikipedia}
factual and boring, I know.
Why do we yawn, and why is it contagious?
Originally posted by KewpieYawning gets oxygen to the brain when we're tired. Perhaps they are contagious like laughing or smiling because it looks like a good idea when you see someone do it.
Clocks traditionally follow this sense of rotation because of the clock's predecessor: the sundial. Clocks with hands were first built in the Northern Hemisphere (see main article), and they were made to work like sundials. In order for a horizontal sundial to work (in the Northern Hemisphere), it must be placed looking southward. Then, when the Sun moves in ...[text shortened]... .
{wikipedia}
factual and boring, I know.
Why do we yawn, and why is it contagious?
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Que?