Replace asterisk symbols with ...
[5315] Replace asterisk symbols with ... - Replace asterisk symbols with a letters (*L*C* *****T*) and guess the name of musician band. Length of words in solution: 5,7. - #brainteasers #music - Correct Answers: 19 - The first user who solved this task is Fazil Hashim
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Replace asterisk symbols with ...

Replace asterisk symbols with a letters (*L*C* *****T*) and guess the name of musician band. Length of words in solution: 5,7.
Correct answers: 19
The first user who solved this task is Fazil Hashim.
#brainteasers #music
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Lost Rooster

The priest in a small Irish village was very fond of the chickens he kept in the hen house out the back of the parish manse. He had a cock rooster and about ten hens.
One Saturday night the cock rooster went missing and as that was the time he suspected cock fights occurred in the village he decided to do something about it at church the next morning.
At Mass, he asked the congregation "Has anybody got a cock?" - all the men stood up.
"No No" he said "That wasn't what I meant. Has anybody seen a cock?" - all the women stood up.
"No No" he said "That wasn't what I meant. Has anybody seen a cock that doesn't belong to them." - half the women stood up.
"No No" he said "That wasn't what I meant. Has anybody seen my cock?" - all the nuns stood up.             

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African-American patents an ironing board

In 1892, a U.S. patent for a specialized “Ironing Board” was issued to the black American inventor, Sarah Boone, likely a former slave (No. 473,653). Her design featured a quite narrow padded board, curved to make it easier to iron sleeves. Numerous patents were issued before hers with similar titles. The first patent designated specifically as an “Ironing Table” was issued several decades earlier, in 1858, to W. Vandenburg and J. Harvey (No. 19,390). Unpatented styles evolved from long long before that, so no single inventor can be identified for the earliest ironing board. For example, J.H. Mallory's “Ironing Table,” patented 24 Oct 1871 (No. 120,296) more closely resembles today's adjustable-height, collapsible model.«
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