Replace asterisk symbols with ...
[4689] Replace asterisk symbols with ... - Replace asterisk symbols with a letters (***K*N **R*) and guess the name of musician band. Length of words in solution: 6,4. - #brainteasers #music - Correct Answers: 24 - The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic
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Replace asterisk symbols with ...

Replace asterisk symbols with a letters (***K*N **R*) and guess the name of musician band. Length of words in solution: 6,4.
Correct answers: 24
The first user who solved this task is Djordje Timotijevic.
#brainteasers #music
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When can we see the baby?

With all the new technology regarding fertility, an 88-year-old woman was able to give birth to a baby recently.

When she was discharged from the hospital and went home, various relatives came to visit. “May we see the new baby?” one of them asked.

“Not yet,” said the mother. “I'll make coffee and we can visit for a while first.”

Another half hour passed before another relative asked, “May we see the new baby now?”

“No, not yet,” said the mother.

A while later and again the guests asked, “May we see the baby now?”

“No, not yet,” replied the mother.

Growing impatient, they asked, “Well, when can we see the baby?”

“When it cries!” she told them.

"When it cries?” they gasped. “Why do we have to wait until it cries?”

“Because, I forgot where I put it.”

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Sir J.J. Thomson

Died 30 Aug 1940 at age 83 (born 18 Dec 1856). Joseph John Thomson was an English physicist who helped revolutionize the knowledge of atomic structure by his discovery of the electron (1897). He received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1906 and was knighted in 1908. Thomson experimented with currents of electricity inside empty glass tubes, investigating a long-standing puzzle known as “cathode rays.” His experiments prompted him to make a bold proposal: these mysterious rays are streams of particles much smaller than atoms. He called these particles “corpuscles,” and suggested that they might make up all of the matter in atoms. It was startling to imagine particles inside the atom at a time when most people thought that the atom was indivisible, the most fundamental unit of matter.
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