If you break me I do not sto...
[5441] If you break me I do not sto... - If you break me I do not stop working, If you touch me I may be snared, If you lose me Nothing will matter. What Am I? - #brainteasers #riddles - Correct Answers: 28 - The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic
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If you break me I do not sto...

If you break me I do not stop working, If you touch me I may be snared, If you lose me Nothing will matter. What Am I?
Correct answers: 28
The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic.
#brainteasers #riddles
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Two factory workers were talki...

Two factory workers were talking. "I know how to get some time off fromwork." said the man.
"How do you think you will do that?" said the other one. He proceeded toshow her...by climbing up to the rafters, and hanging upside down.
The boss walked in, saw the worker hanging from the ceiling, and asked himwhat on earth he was doing? "I'm a light bulb" answered the guy.
"I think you need some time off," said the boss. So, the man jumped downand walked out of the factory. The second worker began walking out too.The boss asked her where did she think she was going?
"Home. I can't work in the dark."
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Alfred Day Hershey

Born 4 Dec 1908; died 22 May 1997 at age 88. American biologist who, along with Max Delbrück and Salvador Luria, won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1969. The prize was given for research done on bacteriophages (viruses that infect bacteria). This was the famous “blender experiment”(1956). Hershey used an isotope- labeled phage to to infect a bacterial colony and begin to inject their genetic material into the host cells. Then he whirred them in a Waring Blendor to tear the phage particles from the bacterial walls without rupturing the bacteria. Upon examining the bacteria, Hershey found that only phage DNA, but no detectable protein, had been inserted into them. This showed that the DNA was sufficient to transfer to the bacteria all the genetic information needed to produce more phage.
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