Interesting and Humour - page 2355
You are missing trading opportunities:
- Free trading apps
- Over 8,000 signals for copying
- Economic news for exploring financial markets
Registration
Log in
You agree to website policy and terms of use
If you do not have an account, please register
You're getting closer to Napoleon, little by little... Smoke some more creativity.
The distance from the Earth to the Moon on a scale. Feel how important you are!
But for incitement to smoke, Russian law provides three to five years' aggravated execution, followed by quartering by hanging. Ay-yi-yi.
Now: Krasnoyarsk
Full post here.
-----------
From Kemerovo to Krasnoyarsk
"... The famous "10 ruble bridge" depicted on the corresponding banknote. At the time of its construction, the Communal Bridge was the longest road bridge in Asia." :
read the full post here.
If something has been deleted, it can be searched for in the search engine cache.
How to search google cache
In order to retrieve a version of a page from google cache, the following code should be inserted in front of the address of the desired page
Watches with magnifying glasses instead of hands
Why the "clockwise" direction and not the other way round?
Before mechanical clocks were invented, people mainly used sundials. In its simplest form, the sundial was a gnomon - a pole buried in the ground, the sun's shadow of which indicated the current time. The path of this shadow became the basis for the path of the hands in mechanical clocks - which is why we consider the clockwise direction to be from above to right rather than from above to left. However, in addition to horizontally positioned sundials, vertical sundials have also been encountered, for example on a wall. In this position, the shadow moves, as we would now say, counterclockwise. Sometimes mechanical watchmakers have followed this principle, and the most famous example of a clock that moves 'counterclockwise' is the chimes on the cathedral in Münster, Germany.