Remove 6 letters from this seq...
[3938] Remove 6 letters from this seq... - Remove 6 letters from this sequence (CRIOMIIQNDLIAL) to reveal a familiar English word. - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles - Correct Answers: 53 - The first user who solved this task is Manguexa Wagle
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Remove 6 letters from this seq...

Remove 6 letters from this sequence (CRIOMIIQNDLIAL) to reveal a familiar English word.
Correct answers: 53
The first user who solved this task is Manguexa Wagle.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles
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She doesn’t trust easily

She doesn’t trust easily- you can see that in the distance creates between herself and around her, but she has much love to offer, and you can see it in the kindness that’s in the smiles she gives out to everyone around her. She has millions of chaotic galaxies of thoughts, thousands of tangled up worlds of words and places in her mind, and you can see it in the way her eyes always seem lost, like they are somewhere else. She always wants to be somewhere else, it shows in the way she’s always rushing and moving, the way she’s always restless. Life never went easy on her, and she didn’t go easy on herself either. She is strong and you can see it in her eyes, you can sense it in her voice. She believes that her body can physically rebuild and heal itself. I think that’s because she knew how to recover by herself after life had broken her. She knows how it’s like to be under-appreciated. So if you can’t see the beauty in her quirks, if you don’t think that maybe she might be a little piece of magic, don’t you dare and say that she is just a girl; because she’s a . ~ Author Unknown
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Frank Harold Spedding

Died 15 Dec 1984 at age 82 (born 22 Oct 1902).American chemist who, during the 1940s and '50s, developed processes for reducing individual rare-earth elements to the metallic state at low cost, thereby making these substances available to industry at reasonable prices. Earlier, upon the discovery of nuclear fission in 1939, the U.S. government asked leading scientists to join in the development of nuclear energy. In 1942, Iowa State College's Frank H. Spedding, an expert in the chemistry of rare earths, agreed to set up the Ames portion of the Manhattan Project, resulting in an easy and inexpensive procedure to produce high quality uranium. Between 1942 and 1945, almost two million pounds of uranium was processed on campus, in the old Popcorn Laboratory.
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