2014년 12월 31일 수요일

100 things we didn't know last year


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BBC News Magazine
 
 
 
Afternoon all,

Before you start on getting on with 2015, have a look back at our almanac of the best unexpected facts of 2014.

1. The Pentagon has a plan for combating a zombie apocalypse.
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2. Seals like to have sex with penguins.
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3. Hello Kitty is not a cat - she's a little girl.
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4. It's quicker - by about three hours - to read the Hobbit than watch Peter Jackson's movie trilogy.
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5. There have been lions in London since the 13th Century - arriving either in 1210 or 1235 - although they may have died out briefly under Henry VI in 1436.
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6. Age renders you less certain as to whether a badger or a baboon would win in a fight.
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7. Dreams get weirder as the night wears on.
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8. Gladiators were mostly vegetarian.
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9. The release of a track by Freddie Mercury and Michael Jackson was delayed more than 30 years because Mercury objected to the presence of Bubbles the chimp at its recording.
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10. It's possible to charge a Nokia Lumia 930 using 800 apples and potatoes connected with copper wire and nails.
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11. Watching action films makes you eat more.
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12. Sir John Gielgud wrote the script for a gay porn film.
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13. It's against the law in England and Wales to swallow and regurgitate goldfish, even if they survive, but it may be legal to do the same with an octopus.
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14. American teachers are allowed to whack children with a paddle (a wooden bat a little shorter and thinner than a cricket bat) in 19 states.
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15. There is a "right" way to eat chocolate - you pop a piece in your mouth, let it melt between the tongue and the palate, and then breathe in through your mouth and out through your nose.
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16. It's actually fairly easy to weigh an ant.
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17. At least three Google employees have lived for months in their vehicles on the firm's California campus, eating in the staff cafeteria and showering in gyms.
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18. The bass line of Lou Reed's Walk on the Wild Side cost £17.
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19. Dollar squiggles on the pavement denote electric cables below.
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20. The most effective office regime is to work for 52 consecutive minutes and then have a 17-minute break.
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21. Ukraine's navy is equipped with combat sea lions.
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22. A porcupine can fight off a pride of lions.
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23. Two per cent of Anglican clergy are not sure whether God is "more than a human construct".
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24. Los Angeles prison inmates have to pass a "gay-dar" test to stay in the safest wing.
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25. Over 88% of individual winners at the Darwin Awards are men.
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26. At the Starbucks outlet in the CIA's Langley headquarters, baristas aren't allowed to write customers' names on their cups.
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27. When a person's age ends with a nine they are more likely to seek extramarital affairs, sign up for their first marathon, and run marathons faster than when they were slightly older or slightly younger.
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28. Popping a criminal's phone in a microwave and closing the door (but not switching it on) stops said criminal wiping it remotely.
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29. In China, Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson are known as Curly Fu and Peanut.
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30. The most expensive pies of any English league football club are to be found at Brighton & Hove Albion - Rochdale's are the cheapest.
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31. It is almost impossible to take a German-registered car into Japan.
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32. Olive oil and baking powder are rubbed onto parts of the Sydney Opera House in order to maintain it.
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33. Tall men get married earlier but short men stay married longer.
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34. Dodger Stadium, home of the Los Angeles Dodgers, is the most expensive Major League Baseball ground in which to propose marriage.
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35. There are more bicycles in Copenhagen than people.
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36. Lawrence of Arabia was offered a job as a nightwatchman at the Bank of England. He turned it down.
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37. The Indian record for staff absenteeism is thought to have been set by a biology teacher who did not turn up for work for 23 years.
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38. Senior technology gurus at the White House don't have to tuck their shirts in.
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39. Elephants can differentiate between men and women, and between different ethnicities, when they hear a voice.
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40. There is a brown bear living at the Chernobyl site.
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41. The average length of a Best Picture Academy Award-winning film is two hours and 20 minutes.
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42. The best way to prevent your headphones from tangling in your bag is to join the ends together.
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43. It is illegal to race rubber ducks in some US states.
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44. A salmon cannon fires 40 fish a minute.
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45. Simon Cowell has a saying for people editing shots of him on X Factor: Two words - happy and handsome.
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46. When making a decision, former England and Derbyshire fast bowler Devon Malcolm asks himself: "What would Margaret Beckett do?"
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47. Yorkshire and Humberside are as red-headed as Ireland.
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48. There is a symphonic Finnish prog-rock concept album about Scrooge McDuck.
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49. In Somalia, the word for president also means "big head".
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50. When Richard III was killed he suffered at least 11 injuries, although some of them might have been inflicted after death.
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51.
 According to OED, Cornish and Welsh have had less influence on the English language than Hawaiian, Swahili or Zulu.
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52. The US National Security Agency used to have a Clown Club for staff members.
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53. Kenny G's Going Home is used in public spaces in China to tell people to go home.
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54. Czech deer still avoid the Iron Curtain.
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55. Sir Bradley Wiggins is a fan of the Archers.
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56. The largest hunting dinosaur probably ate whole sharks.
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57. In Oklahoma, the average marijuana joint costs the same as 2.41 bottles of Bud Light.
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58. Group jogging is a crime in Burundi.
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59. It would cost £12.6 billion to issue every man, woman and child in the UK with an owl (and £69.3 billion if each was to get its own aviary).
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60. Some nurses in the UK wear fat suits as part of their training for dealing with morbidly obese patients.
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61. People are more likely to catch yawns from people of their own ethnicity.
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62. Putting broken pottery in plant pots doesn't aid drainage.
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63. When given a date far in the future, William Hague can tell you off the top of his head which day of the week it will be.
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64. Detainees at Guantanamo are allowed to watch the World Cup but don't see it live - it is made available a day later to ensure nothing subversive can be conveyed.
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65. Guinness in 1982 came close to re-launching the brand as an English beer brewed in west London.
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66. Prince is very good at ping pong.
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67. When crows drop stones into water to make food more accessible, they display the reasoning skills of children aged 5-7.
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68. People called Eleanor are disproportionately likely to get into Oxford University.
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69. Hillary Clinton hasn't driven a car since 1996.
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70. Man-eating sharks are nine times more likely to kill men than women.
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71. Cate Blanchett and her husband share an email account.
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72. Men whose dating profile pictures are taken outdoors on a sunny day with trees in the background are most popular.
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73. Main characters are more likely to die in children's cartoons than in films for adults.
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74. The authorities in Oregon, USA, are very, very particular about getting urine in their reservoirs.
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75. It's possible for a bat in the UK to fly across the sea to continental Europe.
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76. Richard Nixon was interested in the mating habits of pandas.
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77. The code A113 is implanted in every Pixar movie.
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78. The coat of a dead dog called London Jack, whose stuffed remains were used to collect charity donations at railway stations, changed colour twice.
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79. French trains are fatter than 50 years ago.
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80. In primates there is a correlation between female infidelity and males having large testicles.
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81. The last British Prime Minister to regularly wear a wedding ring in public was Lady Thatcher.
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82. Kladdkaka, a flat gooey chocolate cake, is the most googled food in Sweden.
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83. The faces of the fastest riders in the Tour de France are 25% more attractive to women than the slowest 10% of riders, although women on the pill had a reduced preference for quicker riders.
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84. Early risers are more unethical at night and night owls more immoral in the morning.
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85. St Mary's Church is the most ambiguous term on Wikipedia.
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86. Researchers at Michigan Technical University have been looking for the existence of time travellers on the internet.
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87. The sound of a ticking clock can make women keener to have babies younger.
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88. Dead passengers on British Airways flights used to be given sunglasses, a vodka and tonic and a copy of the Daily Mail to disguise them from other passengers.
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89. The Black Death improved public health in subsequent centuries, although no-one knows the exact reason.
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90. There are at least three different approved ways of saying Hyundai, depending on whether you're in South Korea, the UK or US.
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91. England manager Roy Hodgson and player Leighton Baines share a passion for the novelist Haruki Murakami.
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92. The Star Wars character Han Solo was partly based on Francis Ford Coppola.
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93. The first bar code on a commercial product was on a packet of Wrigley's Juicy Fruit chewing gum.
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94. Pennsylvania is the most linguistically rich US state - it has five dialects, compared with the typical two or three.
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95. There is a once-a-year a bus service from Salisbury Plain to Imber.
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96. Comedian Les Dawson wrote a secret romantic thriller under the nom de plume Maria Brett-Cooper.
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97. Congo-Brazzaville has a peat bog the size of England.
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98. Snakes squeeze tree trunks far harder than necessary.
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99. The pope believes that animals go to heaven.
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100. The dark side of the Moon is actually turquoise.
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