Word Association: REVOLUTION, CITY, MANIAC, EDUCATION
[296] Word Association: REVOLUTION, CITY, MANIAC, EDUCATION - Word Association: REVOLUTION, CITY, MANIAC, EDUCATION - #brainteasers #wordpuzzles #wordassociations - Correct Answers: 32 - The first user who solved this task is Sanja Šabović
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Word Association: REVOLUTION, CITY, MANIAC, EDUCATION

Word Association: REVOLUTION, CITY, MANIAC, EDUCATION
Correct answers: 32
The first user who solved this task is Sanja Šabović.
#brainteasers #wordpuzzles #wordassociations
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Never been to a strip club

A wife decides to take her husband to a strip club for his birthday. They arrive at the club and the doorman says, “Hey, Dave! How ya doin’?”

His wife is puzzled and asks if he’s been to this club before.

“Oh, no,” says Dave. “He’s on my bowling team.”

When they are seated, a waitress asks Dave if he’d like his usual and brings over a Budweiser.

His wife is becoming increasingly uncomfortable and says, “How did she know that you drink Budweiser?”

“She’s in the Ladies’ Bowling League, honey. We share lanes with them.”

A stripper then comes over to their table, throws her arms around Dave, and says “Hi Davey. Want your usual lap dance, big boy?”

Dave’s wife, now furious, grabs her purse and storms out of the club.

Dave follows and spots her getting into a cab. Before she can slam the door, he jumps in beside her. He tries desperately to explain how the stripper must have mistaken him for someone else, but his wife is having none of it. She is screaming at him at the top of her lungs, calling him every name in the book.

The cabby turns his head and says, “Looks like you picked up a real bitch tonight, Dave.”

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French Republican calendar in use

In 1793, following the French Revolution, the new government wanted a new Calendar of Reason, also known as the French Revolutionary Calendar or Republican calendar to replace the Gregorian calendar. It was developed by a committee of mathematicians, astronomers, poets and dramatists. The year still had 12 months, but all were 30 days long, each having three 10-day décades instead of 7-day weeks. Five supplementary days were added to make a 365 day year (six in a leap year). A scheme of new names was introduced for the months, and even a name for every day of the year. The calendar was back-dated in the sense that the first day of the first year was set at 22 Sep 1792, to mark the start of the new Republic. The scheme was in place for about 14 years, but abolished on 31 Dec 1805.«
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