Find a famous person
[5310] Find a famous person - Find the first and the last name of a famous person. Text may go in all 8 directions. Length of words in solution: 7,4. - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles - Correct Answers: 19 - The first user who solved this task is Alfa Omega
BRAIN TEASERS
enter your answer and press button OK

Find a famous person

Find the first and the last name of a famous person. Text may go in all 8 directions. Length of words in solution: 7,4.
Correct answers: 19
The first user who solved this task is Alfa Omega.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles
Register with your Google Account and start collecting points.
Check your ranking on list.

Top 10 jokes of the 2023 Edinburgh Fringe

Edinburgh Fringe 2023, the funniest joke: Lorna Rose Treen's zookeeper pun:

"I started dating a zookeeper,
but it turned out he was a cheetah."
~Lorna Rose Treen.

Here are the rest of the top 10 jokes:

"The most British thing I've ever heard?
A lady who said 'Well I'm sorry, but I don't apologise.'"
~Liz Guterbock.

"Last year I had a great joke about inflation.
But it's hardly worth it now."
~Amos Gill.

"When women gossip we get called bitchy;
but when men do it's called a podcast."
~Sikisa.

"I thought I'd start off with a joke about The Titanic
- just to break the ice."
~Masai Graham.

"How do coeliac Germans greet each other?
Gluten tag."
~Frank Lavender.

"My friend got locked in a coffee place overnight.
Now he only ever goes into Starbucks, not the rivals.
He's Costa-phobic."
~Roger Swift.

"I entered the 'How not to surrender' competition and
I won hands down."
~Bennett Arron.

"Nationwide must have looked pretty silly
when they opened their first branch."
~William Stone.

"My grandma describes herself as being in her 'twilight years'
which I love because they're great films."
~Daniel Foxx.

Jokes of the day - Daily updated jokes. New jokes every day.
Follow Brain Teasers on social networks

Brain Teasers

puzzles, riddles, mathematical problems, mastermind, cinemania...

Oat-crushing machine

In 1875, the first U.S. patent for an oat-crushing machine was issued to Asmus.J. Ehrrichson, of Akron, Ohio (No. 170,536). The patent description gave that previously this had been done "by crushing the grain between rollers, or grinding with burrs or millstones, and subsequently screening ... into different grades." This, it said, resulted in inferior quality due to excessive amounts of flour that was too fine. The invention instead used a series of horizontal knives fixed in a frame through which oats fall from a hopper with a perforated metal bottom. Lateral motion of the hopper causes grain moving through the holes to be sheared against the knives thus producing a desirable coarse grain meal.«
This site uses cookies to store information on your computer. Some are essential to help the site properly. Others give us insight into how the site is used and help us to optimize the user experience. See our privacy policy.