PALINDROME
[2798] PALINDROME - Make the palindrome of the following letters: A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, D, D, D, D, E, E, E, E, G, G, H, H, L, L, M, M, O, O, R, R, S, S, S, S, T, T, T, T - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles #palindrome - Correct Answers: 27 - The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic
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PALINDROME

Make the palindrome of the following letters: A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, D, D, D, D, E, E, E, E, G, G, H, H, L, L, M, M, O, O, R, R, S, S, S, S, T, T, T, T
Correct answers: 27
The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles #palindrome
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Little Johnny is taking a show...

Little Johnny is taking a shower with his mother and says, "Mom, what are those things on your chest!?" Unsure of how to reply, she tells Johnny to ask his dad at breakfast tomorrow, quite certain the matter would be forgotten.

Johnny didn't forget. The following morning he asked his father the same question. His father, always quick with the answers, says, "Why Johnny, those are balloons. When your mommy dies, we can blow them up and she'll float to heaven." Johnny thinks that's neat and asks no more questions.

A few weeks later, Johnnys' dad comes home from work a few hours early. Johnny runs out of the house crying hysterically, "Daddy! Daddy! Mommy's dying!!"

His father says, "Calm down son! Why do you think Mommy's dying?"

"Uncle Harry is blowing up Mommys' balloons and she's screaming, "Oh God, I'm coming!"
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Johann Salamo Christoph Schweigger

Born 8 Apr 1779; died 6 Sep 1857 at age 78.German physicist who invented the galvanometer (1820), a device to measure the strength of an electric current. He developed the principle from Oersted's experiment (1819) which showed that current in a wire will deflect a compass needle. Schweigger realized that suggested a basic measuring instrument, since a stronger current would produce a larger deflection, and he increased the effect by winding the wire many times in a coil around the magnetic needle. He named this instrument a “galvanometer”in honour of Luigi Galvani, the professor who gave Volta the idea for the first battery. Thomas Seebeck (1770-1831) named the innovative coil, Schweigger's multiplier. It became the basis of moving coil instruments and loudspeakers.
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