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Showing posts with label strange. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strange. Show all posts

Apr 4, 2019

[Answer] 9. Strange things may happen to words. Which of the following words refers to a coverchief which was originally made in, and got its name from, a town in Morocco, but is now mainly associated with other countries, such as Turkey?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "9. Strange things may happen to words. Which of the following words refers to a coverchief which was originally made in, and got its name from, a town in Morocco, but is now mainly associated with other countries, such as Turkey? "



...1. beret 2. fez 3. biretta 4. tiara A fez is described as either being worn as a skull cap or a brimless short cylindrical peakless hat that usually has a tassel. It is mostly made of felt and is worn especially by men in eastern Mediterranean countries. A beret is a visorless, usually woollen, cap with a tight headband and soft full flat top. A biretta is a distinctive head-covering, emblematic of a position or office, e.g. the cardinal's biretta. A tiara is either a three-tiered crown (as worn by the Pope) or a decorative jewelled headband (as worn by women on very formal occasions).

Mar 25, 2019

[Answer] 7. I've found a man wearing some strange sort of armour and carrying a rifle. He says to me "such is life". By his appearance, I think he is from the 19th century. Who could he be ?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "7. I've found a man wearing some strange sort of armour and carrying a rifle. He says to me "such is life". By his appearance, I think he is from the 19th century. Who could he be ?"



...1. Ned Kelly 2. Bob Hawke 3. John Howard 4. Paul Keating Ned Kelly was probably the best known of the 19th Century Australian bushrangers. Born in 1855, he was hanged in Melbourne on 11th November 1880 at the age of 25. His last words are reputed to be "such is life". The others mentioned were Australian Prime Ministers of the twentieth century - a different form of bushranging!

Feb 5, 2019

[Answer] 4. She liked fur coats and hot things and had a strange hair style. She also disliked animals, particularly those of the canine variety. There were at least 101 reasons to hate this character. What was her name?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "4. She liked fur coats and hot things and had a strange hair style. She also disliked animals, particularly those of the canine variety. There were at least 101 reasons to hate this character. What was her name?"



...1. Baby Jane Hudson 2. Margaret Thatcher 3. Cruella de Vil 4. Aunt Sarah 'Cruella de Vil' first appeared in Dodie Smith's 1956 book 'The Hundred and One Dalmatians' and was later immortalised in an animated movie and two live-action films. Cruella liked pepper and fur coats and hated dogs. Dalmatians, she believed, had the perfect coat for fashion accessories and she wanted to capture and skin as many as possible. Cruella had a strange black hairstyle with a white streak. 'Cruella de Vil' was rated number 2 in 'The 50 Foulest Fiends in Literature', a feature in the 'Daily Telegraph' in September 2008.

Nov 7, 2018

[Answer] 1. My first name is Lemuel. I began to travel around the world and ended up in some strange places such as Lilliput, Brobdingnag and Laputa. Name my book.

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "1. My first name is Lemuel. I began to travel around the world and ended up in some strange places such as Lilliput, Brobdingnag and Laputa. Name my book."



...1. "Gulliver's Travels" by Jonathan Swift 2. "Travels Around the World" by Richard Cambe 3. "Five Weeks In A Balloon" by Jules Verne 4. "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" by Jules Verne "Travels Around the World" by Richard Cambe is fake. The real story is "Gulliver's Travels" by Jonathan Swift. Lemeul Gulliver travels around the world in four parts. In part one he travels to the very popular Lilliput where the six-inch people live in. In part two, he travels to Brobdingnag where the giants live. In part three, he travels to several islands, the most popular one being Laputa. In part four, the last part, he travels to Houyhynhym.

Oct 17, 2018

[Answer] Well, this is a strange country - it has three capitals, and eleven official national languages! In what country can we celebrate Mandela Day on July 18?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "Well, this is a strange country - it has three capitals, and eleven official national languages! In what country can we celebrate Mandela Day on July 18?"



...Most countries manage to get by with one capital city, but in South Africa the legislature is in Cape Town, the executive capital is Pretoria, and the judicial capital is in Bloemfontein; and none of these is the largest city - that is Johannesburg. The national languages include English and Afrikaans, left over from colonial times, and nine of the tribal languages which are the most widely spoken and understood. There are at least a dozen more semi-official languages. Mandela Day celebrates the efforts of Nelson Mandela to bring an end to the policy of apartheid. Celebrated on his birthday, an interesting part of the observance is the idea that everyone should spend 67 minutes during the day in service to the local community or to some charity. The number of minutes is the same as the number of years during which Mandela was politically active.

Jan 15, 2018

[Ans] What strange objects appeared around the Gulf of Ob in Siberia during winter 2016?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "What strange objects appeared around the Gulf of Ob in Siberia during winter 2016?"



...The Ob River  also Obi, is a major river in western Siberia, Russia, and is the world's seventh-longest river. It forms at the confluence of the Biya and Katun Rivers which have their origins in the Altay Mountains. It is the westernmost of the three great Siberian rivers that flow into the Arctic Ocean (the other two being the Yenisei River and the Lena River).



Step 2 : Answer to the question "What strange objects appeared around the Gulf of Ob in Siberia during winter 2016?"



Giant, naturally occurring snowballs:


The accumulation of giant snowballs around Siberia's Gulf of Ob looked like a scene from a sci-fi movie, but the strange snowballs formed naturally. These unusual objects result from an extremely rare environmental phenomenon that finds fragments of ice gradually rolled into spheres by wind and water currents. Although the exact type of weather and environmental mix needed for these balls to form isn't clear, most experts agree it is likely a combination of ice formation, temperatures and ocean currents. Source: ScienceAlert.com


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