Remove 4 letters from this seq...
[4911] Remove 4 letters from this seq... - Remove 4 letters from this sequence (WMEMBAREAUNE) to reveal a familiar English word. - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles - Correct Answers: 45 - The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic
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Remove 4 letters from this seq...

Remove 4 letters from this sequence (WMEMBAREAUNE) to reveal a familiar English word.
Correct answers: 45
The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles
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A stingy old lawyer who had be...

A stingy old lawyer who had been diagnosed with a terminal illness was determined to prove wrong the saying, "You can't take it with you."
After much thought and consideration, the man finally figured out how to take at least some of his money with him when he died. He instructed his wife to go to the bank and withdraw enough money to fill two pillow cases.
He then directed her to take the bags of money to the attic and leave them directly above his bed. His plan: When he passed away, he would reach out and grab the bags on his way to heaven.
Several weeks after the funeral, the deceased lawyer's wife, up in the attic cleaning, came upon the two pillow cases stuffed with cash.
"Oh, that darned old fool," she exclaimed. "I knew he should have had me put the money in the basement."
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John Mercer

Died 30 Nov 1866 at age 75 (born 21 Feb 1791).English chemist and industrialist who invented the mercerisation process for treating cotton which is still in use today and was a pioneer in colour photography. From age 16, and throughout his life, he investigated and developed chemical textile dyes. Late in his life, in 1844, he found that when cotton is treated with caustic chemicals, it became thicker and shorter - thereby stronger and shrink-resistant. Further, the cotton was more easily dyed, needed 30% less dye, more absorbant, and could be given an attractive silk-like lustre. He called his process mercerisation and patented it in 1850. Mercerisation was applied to many other materials, such as parchment and woolen fabric, and remains an important part of the cotton finishing process today.
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