• This topic has 64 replies, 41 voices, and was last updated 1 year ago by reeksy.
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  • Today I Learned / Discovered…
  • Cougar
    Full Member

    TIL that the ‘drop of a hat’ line in the theme tune to Fingermouse is a pun.

    What have you learned or discovered today?

    finbar
    Free Member

    The modern version of PMQs – with the Prime Minister answering questions on everything, rather than immediately referring qs to relevant secretaries of state – originated with Thatcher, who started doing it to exert her primacy over the whole cabinet.

    Rubber_Buccaneer
    Full Member

    TIL that Fingermouse had a best forgotten solo career post Fingerbobs.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    I had no idea either. It might have been good though! I don’t remember ever seeing it.

    tthew
    Full Member

    All Canadian airport codes begin with the character Y. This is because their radio stations call signs all began with Y so when airports were invented they chose to continue the convention.

    willard
    Full Member

    You’d think they would all end in “ey” instead

    thepurist
    Full Member

    All Canadian airport codes begin with the character Y

    Or a C… because today’s the day you learn that most airports have two codes, one 4 character that’s used for air traffic control (the ICAO code eg EGLL is Heathrow) and a 3 character code that’s used for baggage and ticketing (the IATA code eg LHR for Heathrow). Some countries, including Canada, just append a country code to the front of the IATA code to give the ICAO code so the codes for Vancouver are YVR or CYVR.

    Pyro
    Full Member

    All Canadian airport codes begin with the character Y. This is because their radio stations call signs all began with Y so when airports were invented they chose to continue the convention.

    Not quite true! 25 regional Canadian airport codes start with ‘Z’ – I’ve flown into one of them!

    nickc
    Full Member

    Listening to history podcast I learned that the “Puritans” didn’t called themselves that, they referred to each other as the “Godly”, other’s called them (at the time) Separatists, and they left the UK to go to Holland first, which they left because Holland had too much religious freedom for them to tolerate, and they didn’t like their children learning Dutch.

    On scouting about, when they landed at Plymouth Rock, they came across some native graves, which they uncovered, and robbed for the corn that was buried alongside the dead, and the first actual live native that they met; Squanto, could speak passable English, he went to England, and when he came back, he found that most of his tribe had been killed by plague.

    midlifecrashes
    Full Member

    Blue lotus flowers are psychoactive and the Egyptians used to add it to their wine for funsies.

    I’ve spent half the day at a lunch and talk by Joann Fletcher learning about all sorts of similar useful things.

    rickmeister
    Full Member

    We could post anything at all by Tom Scott here. Every day is a schoolday.

    temudgin
    Full Member

    The oldest human remains in Britain were found in Boxgrove West Sussex. They date from around 480,000 years ago.

    https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2020/aug/analysis-boxgrove-how-we-found-europes-oldest-bone-tools-and-what-we-learned-about-their

    sirromj
    Full Member

    Bubbles in pee is a thing that could be of concern.

    timba
    Free Member

    A normal airfield traffic circuit is flown to the left by default and isn’t signed
    If it changes to a right-hand pattern then a sign is laid out

    akira
    Full Member

    I learnt about the Blue Lotus Flowers as well, but it was on What We Do In The Shadows and I didn’t realise it was true.

    roger_mellie
    Full Member

    That ‘learned’ is more North American and ‘learnt’ is more British.

    ransos
    Free Member

    That a homophone is always a homonym but a homonym is not always a homophone. Because it could be a homograph.

    My nine year old rolled her eyes at my stupidity.

    thols2
    Full Member

    The Japanese language has no word for “paper cut”.

    reeksy
    Full Member

    My nine year old rolled her eyes at my stupidity.

    It’s scary how they know all of the names for all the languagey things nowadays isn’t it?

    aphex_2k
    Free Member

    thols2
    Free Member
    The Japanese language has no word for “paper cut”.

    Pēpākatto (ペーパーカット)

    thols2
    Full Member

    Pēpākatto (ペーパーカット)

    Does not mean the same as the English expression “paper cut”. This is a Japanese ペーパーカット. It’s for cutting paper, it’s not a cut inflicted by paper.

    thols2
    Full Member

    Damn, now I’m plagued with endless ads for Japanese office equipment.

    RoterStern
    Free Member

    The Japanese language has no word for “paper cut”.
    And neither does Englih.😉

    stretch…
    Free Member

    “Shut yer gob” originates from mining. It refers to filling a mined area back up with deads in order to control air flow

    Kryton57
    Full Member

    Even a corporate edict can be transcended when the Directors wife wants to steal your glory.

    Beagleboy
    Full Member

    Reading, and enjoying ‘Revolution: How the Bicycle Reinvented Modern Britain’ by William Manners, I’ve discovered why Jasper is called a ‘Pathracer’ bicycle. Path was the old Victorian / Edwardian name for velodrome track, but a Pathracer was a track bike that was modified for the road with freehub and coaster brake. I did not know that.

    Jasper, earlier in the year…

    thenorthwind
    Full Member

    Speaking of airports, I learned recently that the runway numbers aren’t random, they’re approximate headings: e.g. runway 22 is at roughly 220deg. They’re referenced to magnetic north, so occasionally they need to be changed.

    thenorthwind
    Full Member

    Reading, and enjoying ‘Revolution: How the Bicycle Reinvented Modern Britain’ by William Manners

    Sounds fascinating, will be ordering a copy of that. Fine bicycle BTW.

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    Airports charge landing fees, but all the take-offs are free.

    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    It’s scary how they know all of the names for all the languagey things nowadays isn’t it?

    As someone with an A grade O level in English language, why have they taught my kids all this shit I never learnt or needed?

    Airports charge landing fees, but all the take-offs are free.

    I learnt that many years ago when someone leant me a cassette tape of a very funny after dinner speech by an air traffic controller. I need to trawl the Internet and see if it exists anywhere

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    I learnt that many years ago when someone leant me a cassette tape of a very funny after dinner speech by an air traffic controller. I need to trawl the Internet and see if it exists anywhere

    That’s where I got it from too!

    creakingdoor
    Free Member

    .

    thepurist
    Full Member

    Speaking of airports, I learned recently that the runway numbers aren’t random, they’re approximate headings

    Which then means that (most) airports technically have twice as many ‘runways’ as you think because for instance a pilot at Heathrow could be told to use 27L, 09R, 27R or 09L depending on whether the airport is operating to the East or West. So those two strips of concrete/tarmac/whatever actually count as four ‘runways’ in air traffic terms.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    “Shut yer gob” originates from mining. It refers to filling a mined area back up with deads in order to control air flow

    That sounds like an urban myth to me.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_coal_mining_terminology#G

    The goaf, gove, gob, shut or waste is the void from which all the coal in a seam has been extracted and where the roof is allowed to collapse in a controlled manner.[1][20]The term possibly comes from Welsh language ogof, gof, “cave”.

    But

    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/gob

    From Middle English gobben, gabben (“to drink greedily”), of uncertain origin.

    StirlingCrispin
    Full Member

    The original Chromecast model number was H2G2-42 – a likely reference to The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    HtS – excellent, thank you

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    The tubes and pipes on the Starship Enterprise are labelled with a GNDN number.

    GNDN meaning Goes Nowhere, Does Nothing.

    Star Trek trivia – GNDN meaning

    Cougar
    Full Member

    I Did Not Know That.

    The crawl spaces are called Jeffries Tubes. Named after set designer Matt Jeffries.

    mattyfez
    Full Member

    Today I discovered this is a thing… what a great but simple Idea!

    https://odditymall.com/crapstrap-hands-free-tree-pooping-strap

    It’s basically just a strap/ratchet… but It’s a QOL boost for sure hahah!

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    I learned where the secret door in the library is after working here for the last week.

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