Remove 5 letters from this seq...
[4207] Remove 5 letters from this seq... - Remove 5 letters from this sequence (KOCAMOEIORA) to reveal a familiar English word. - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles - Correct Answers: 70 - The first user who solved this task is Thinh Ddh
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Remove 5 letters from this seq...

Remove 5 letters from this sequence (KOCAMOEIORA) to reveal a familiar English word.
Correct answers: 70
The first user who solved this task is Thinh Ddh.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles
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Heaven or ???

A spiritualist who'd recently been widowed met a colleague and reported excitedly that she'd just received a message from her dead husband - asking her to send him a pack of cigarettes.

"The only thing is," she mused, "that I don't know where to send them."

"Why not?" asked her friend.

"Well, he didn't actually say that he was in Heaven - but I can't imagine he'd be in Hell."

"Hm," responded the friend. "Well, maybe I shouldn't bring this up, but. . . he didn't mention anything about including matches in the package, did he?"

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Artificial sweetener patent

In 1966, James M. Schlatter applied for a patent for “Peptide Sweetening Agents” (U.S. No. 3,492,131), an invention which eventually led led to the marketing of aspartame under the name NutraSweet. A few months earlier, in Dec 1965, he had accidentally discovered the first example of such compounds. To pick up a paper, he had licked his finger. He tasted an unexpectedly sweet trace of a substance that had, he realized, earlier splashed onto the outside of a flask he had handled. It contained L-aspartyl-L-phenylalnine methyl ester. The patent was issued 27 Jan 1970, assigned to his employer, G.D. Searle & Co. After development and much scrutiny of the testing of aspartame, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved it (22 Oct 1981) with many permitted uses as a food sweetener.«
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