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Factoids
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Factoid (n) A statement that could plausibly be true, but probably isn't.
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If you perfectly relax all the muscles in your tongue and throat, and gently take hold of it with a pair of sugar tongs, it is possible to pull it out from the mouth a distance of six inches or more. However, if you do this you will not be able to fit it back in again without surgical intervention.
The electric drill was invented by Stanley Gibbins. [Raak] really?
[Software] Emergency rooms have to deal with several cases every year, usually the result of drunken bets. And that's a factoid!
Due to the angle of the teeth, it's easier to remove a snooker ball from your mouth than to insert one.
Snooker balls are now made partly of depleted uranium, there being so much of this by-product now.
Radiation is now not as bad for you as it once used to be.
When a snooker ball is in the center of the table and the cue ball near one corner, the task of potting the ball into the opposite corner is measureably influenced by the gravitational fields of the players.
The world deflates when you remove an earth rod from the ground.
The "blueberries" in commercially made blueberry muffins are actually pieces of apple, dyed blue.
The IP address of your computer can tell a lot about who you are. For instance, if the first digit in the first group is 5, you are strong-willed but kind, whereas if it is a 6, you are somewhat shy but still self-assertive, and a good listener.
Carcinogens are more likely to be found in Tyne and Weir than any other county.
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