Replace asterisk symbols with ...
[3867] Replace asterisk symbols with ... - Replace asterisk symbols with a letters (*R***** SP****) and guess the name of musician. Length of words in solution: 7,6. - #brainteasers #music - Correct Answers: 23 - The first user who solved this task is H Tav
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Replace asterisk symbols with ...

Replace asterisk symbols with a letters (*R***** SP****) and guess the name of musician. Length of words in solution: 7,6.
Correct answers: 23
The first user who solved this task is H Tav.
#brainteasers #music
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Disappearing diner

A man and a beautiful woman were having dinner in a fine restaurant. Their waitress, taking another order at a table a few paces away suddenly noticed that the man was slowing sliding down his chair and under the table, but the woman acted unconcerned. The waitress watched as the man slid all the way down his chair and out of sight under the table. Still, the woman dining across from him appeared calm and unruffled, apparently unaware that her dining companion had disappeared.

After the waitress finished taking the order, she came over to the table and said to the woman, "Pardon me, ma'am, but I think your husband just slid under the table." The woman calmly looked up at her and replied firmly, "No he didn't. My husband just walked in the door."

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Archibald Scott Couper

Died 11 Mar 1892 at age 60 (born 31 Mar 1831). Scottish chemist who, independently of August Kekulé, proposed the tetravalency of carbon and the ability of carbon atoms to bond with one another to form long chains, which concepts are fundamental to understanding the molecules found in living organisms. He also created the use of a line between element symbols to indicate a chemical bond. He wrote these landmark ideas in a paper to be submitted to the French Academy of Sciences through his superior, Adolphe Wurtz. Sadly for Couper, that paper was not forwarded from the lab in a timely fashion, and meanwhile another chemist, August Kekulé had published the same, though independent, idea of tetravalence, depriving Couper of his due fame.
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