Chess Knight Move
[5604] Chess Knight Move - Find the title of novel, using the move of a chess knight. First letter is T. Length of words in solution: 3,5,6. - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles #chessknightmove - Correct Answers: 34 - The first user who solved this task is Nílton Corrêa De Sousa
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Chess Knight Move

Find the title of novel, using the move of a chess knight. First letter is T. Length of words in solution: 3,5,6.
Correct answers: 34
The first user who solved this task is Nílton Corrêa De Sousa.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles #chessknightmove
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Begin by standing on a comfort...

Begin by standing on a comfortable surface, where you have plenty of room at each side. With a 5-lb potato sack in each hand, extend your arms straight out from your sides and hold them there as long as you can. Try to reach a full minute, and then relax. Each day you'll find that you can hold this position for just a bit longer.
After a couple of weeks, move up to 10-lb potato sacks. Then try 50-lbpotato sacks and then eventually try to get to where you can lift a 100-lbpotato sack in each hand and hold your arms straight for more than a full minute. (I'm at this level.)
After you feel confident at that level, put a potato in each of the sacks.
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Deuterium

In 1933, Ernest Rutherford suggested the names diplogen for the newly discovered heavy hydrogen isotope and diplon for its nucleus. He presented these ideas in the Discussion on Heavy Hydrogen at the Royal Society. For ordinary hydrogen, the lightest of the atoms, having a nuclues of a sole proton, he coined a related name: haplogen. (Greek: haploos, single; diploos, double.) In 1931, Harold Urey had discovered small quantities of atoms of heavy hydrogen wherever ordinary hydrogen occurred. The mass of its nucleus was double that of ordinary hydrogen. This hydrogen-2 is now called deuterium, as named by Urey (Greek: deuteros, second). Its nucleus, named a deuteron, has a neutron in addition to a proton.[ref: Proc. Roy. Soc. A, vol. 144 (1934)]
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