Sounds like another coincidental logical fallacy coming from another research think tank. Sure there may be the end result of economists being more stingy with giving away money, but could you also say that thrifty people are more drawn to the field of economics? Did you know that English majors are most likely to use words to explain ideas in various situations? And in English too! It’s incredible.
5/9. The Transformers one surprised me though, and the Raul Julia one came to my mind before I even took the survey. He did as good a job on the character as one could do with that bad a script, but seriously, he deserved better than that.
2009 was probably the worst year for coined terms ever. I'd like to kick the guy who thought it was a good idea to add staycation to Websters dictionary.
A whole 19 years away? By the time we finish this deflection device I'm sure we would have invented something by then that works three times better, and for half the price. So have they made drafts of the extent of the damage on the planet if it does hit?
Sure, but could you tell if German currency is legit just by looking at it? They are either ignorant of knowing what the bill actually was supposed to look like, or they are feigning ignorance. It's true, Europeans can know just as little about the US as is vice versa.
Just hearing that sentence is painful nostalgia for me.
It wasn't DaVinci, it's was by a Greek dude named Heron, and is known as the worlds first vending machine.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hero_of_Alexandria#Inventions_and_achievements
The opposite to fail is pass. I for won am 4 the pertection of speling mistake's, thAy R & indangered speseas.
Sure, but could you tell if German currency is legit just by looking at it? They are either ignorant of knowing what the bill actually was supposed to look like, or they are feigning ignorance. It's true, Europeans can know just as little about the US as is vice versa.
http://media1.break.com/dnet/media/2009/6/98%20Beatle%20Love.jpg