Strands#265 Did You Hear That?
Quizzes & Puzzles15 mins ago
Sorry for repeating, but this is really groovy:
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Science/Question210215.html
The soup is delicious, and you have a mind numbing science mystery half way through! What is going on? Hot water does not have the same effect. It is very bizarre. Try and let me know. �10 and some free soup (vacuum packed) for the winner.
No best answer has yet been selected by Begram. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.bernardo I use a spoon to eat ma soup and a spoon is defined as follows (from AOL Learning Oxford Dictionary)
"spoon
→ n.
1. an implement consisting of a small, shallow oval or round bowl on a long handle, used for eating, stirring, and serving food. "
Do you see the word "eating?" I don't see the word "drinking" though.......
corbyloon - this morning I had some milk left in my bowl after I'd eaten all the cornflakes so I consumed the remaining milk using my spoon. Are you telling me I ate the milk?
also, as an aside I've just tried an experiment & hit my work colleague on the head with a spoon. Did I just eat his head? And is his head also food?
Bernardo, are you starting to worry about the fact that you might be coming across to other users of this site as a smidgeon pompous? A tad sanctimonious? A wee bit overbearing? More than a little pedantic? Often patronizingly smug? Self-important, conceited, egotistic, not too mention pretentious and supercilious?
No - I am not worrying at all. I take your description as a great compliment. I have always found that being pompous, sanctimonious, overbearing, pedantic, smug, self-important, conceited, egotistic, pretentious and supercilious is the inevitable and unavoidable side-effect of being extremely clever and knowledgeable and always being right about everything.