Remove 5 letters from this seq...
[5666] Remove 5 letters from this seq... - Remove 5 letters from this sequence (LEGEPUCISLATIONO) to reveal a familiar English word. - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles - Correct Answers: 38 - The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic
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Remove 5 letters from this seq...

Remove 5 letters from this sequence (LEGEPUCISLATIONO) to reveal a familiar English word.
Correct answers: 38
The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles
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We don't stop at Victoria....

A man traveling by train asks the ticket collector what time the train stops at Victoria.

"Sir, we don't stop at Victoria."

"But I have to get off there!"

"Well, there might be one thing I can do. I might be able to get the engineer to slow down the train a little. Then I can dangle you out the door and lower you onto the platform."

"Will that work?"

"It's worth a try."

As they approached the platform, the train is slowing from 50 MPH. The collector hangs the man in mid-air out the door. The man starts running in mid-air. "Run faster! Faster!" He lowers the man and the man's feet touch the platform. His shoes start to smoke! His heel comes off! He's running at 30 MPH. He's made it! He starts to slow down! The other passengers stare in amazement.

As the last car goes by, a hand grabs the man by the shirt collar and lifts the man right back into the train! As he's helped back on the train the gent who picked him up says, "Man you're lucky I was here to help! This train doesn't even STOP in Victoria!"

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First telephone twang

In 1875, Alexander Bell used his "harmonic telegraph" to transmit a twanging sound from a reed vibrated by Bell's voice along wires to Watson. Although the instrument transmitted voicelike sounds, the words were not recognizable. Now he knew he was closer to his dream of speech transmission. The striking result on this day came after more tinkering on the instrument, after a simple discovery the previous day. On 2 Jun 1875, the two had been workingon the telegraph. In the transmitter room, Watson was trying to free a reed wound too tightly to the pole of its electromagnet, when it produced a twang. Bell, at work in the receiving room heard the twang and realized the complex overtones and timbre shared characteristics with voice vibrations.[Image: diagram of earlier device under test in Winter 1873]
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