Find 1 of 6 Words Hidden in the Picture
[2449] Find 1 of 6 Words Hidden in the Picture - There are 6 words hidden in the picture, can you find 1 of 6? - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles #riddles - Correct Answers: 246 - The first user who solved this task is Donya Sayah30
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Find 1 of 6 Words Hidden in the Picture

There are 6 words hidden in the picture, can you find 1 of 6?
Correct answers: 246
The first user who solved this task is Donya Sayah30.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles #riddles
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After a particularly poor game...

After a particularly poor game of golf, a popular club member skipped the clubhouse and started to go home. As he was walking to the parking lot to get his car, a policeman stopped him and asked, "Did you tee off on the sixteenth hole about 20 minutes ago?"
"Yes," the golfer responded.
"Did you happen to hook your ball so that it went over the trees and off the course?"
"Yes, I did. How did you know?" he asked.
"Well," said the policeman very seriously, "Your ball flew out onto the highway and crashed through a driver's windshield. The car went out of control, crashing into five other cars and a fire truck. The fire truck couldn't make it to the fire, and the building burned down. So, what are you going to do about it?"
The golfer thought it over carefully and responded... "I think I'll close my stance a little bit, tighten my grip and lower my right thumb."
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William Whewell

Died 6 Mar 1866 at age 71 (born 24 May 1794). English scholar and philosopher known for his survey of the scientific method and for creating scientific words. He founded mathematical crystallography and developed a revision of Friedrich Mohs's classification of minerals. He created the words scientist and physicist by analogy with the word artist. They soon replaced the older term natural philosopher. Other useful words were coined to help his friends: biometry for John Lubbock; Eocine, Miocene and Pliocene for Charles Lyell; and for Michael Faraday, anode, cathode, diamagnetic, paramagnetic, and ion (whence the sundry other particle names ending -ion). In metereology, Whewell devised a self-recording anemometer. He was second only to Isaac Newton for work on tidal theory. He died as a result of being thrown from his horse.«*
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