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08b9afc a basic unit of measure in chemistry, which was named for Avogadro long after his death. It is the number of molecules found in 2.016 grams of hydrogen gas (or an equal volume of any other gas). Its value is placed at 6.0221367 x 1023, which is an enormously large number. Chemistry students have long amused themselves by computing just how large a number it is, so I can report that it is equivalent to the number of popcorn kernels needed to.. Bill Bryson
ede65ed Can we "belong anywhere?" Should we try?" Bill Bryson
64a764a Once there were many more in like vein--e.g., tuifu ("the ultimate in fuckups), tarfu ("things are really fucked up"), fubar ("fucked up beyond all recognition"), and fubid ("fuck you, buddy, I'm detached")." Bill Bryson
1e12ecb There are really only two ways to get hit on the head by a parking barrier. One is to stand underneath a raised barrier and purposely allow it to fall on you. That is the easy way, obviously. The other method--and this is where a little diminished mental capacity can go a long way--is to forget the barrier you have just seen rise, step into the space it has vacated and stand with lips pursed while considering your next move, and then be tak.. Bill Bryson
200cb17 The positive side of thinking you are about to die is that it does make you glad of the little life that is left to you. Bill Bryson
66a184d if we wished to find a modern-day model for British and American speech of the late eighteenth century, we could probably do no better than Yosemite Sam. Bill Bryson
34cd817 In six years, Hoover circled the globe five times. He lived through the Boxer Rebellion in China, hacked through the jungles of Borneo, rode camels across the red emptiness of Western Australia, rubbed shoulders with Wyatt Earp and Jack London in a Klondike saloon, camped beside the Great Pyramids of Egypt. He had experiences as rich and memorable as any young man has ever enjoyed, and was moved by none of them. In Bill Bryson
662a4c3 The country accepted it not only willingly, but almost absent-mindedly. Bill Bryson
097f060 All of this is by way of coming around to the somewhat paradoxical observation that we speak with remarkable laxness and imprecision and yet manage to express ourselves with wondrous subtlety--and simply breathtaking speed. In normal conversation we speak at a rate of about 300 syllables a minute. To do this we force air up through the larynx--or supralaryngeal vocal tract, to be technical about it--and, by variously pursing our lips and fl.. Bill Bryson
e0dcfe4 It is perhaps little wonder that the end of Victorianism almost exactly coincided with the invention of psychoanalysis. psychoanalysis victorian victorian-age victorian-era Bill Bryson
26a425d The dinosaurs, built of concrete, were a kind of bonus attraction. On New Year's Eve 1853 a famous dinner for twenty-one prominent scientists was held inside the unfinished iguanodon. Gideon Mantell, the man who had found and identified the iguanodon, was not among them. The person at the head of the table was the greatest star of the young science of palaeontology. His name was Richard Owen and by this time he had already devoted several p.. Bill Bryson
1c2d6e6 If you have ever wondered why radio and television stations always have call signs beginning with W or K, the answer is that those letters were assigned to American airwaves by an international convention held in London in 1912. The United States was given the call letters A, N, W, and K. A and N were reserved respectively for the army and navy. The other two were given to public broadcasters. Bill Bryson
874b4ca I have long known that it is part of God's plan for me to spend a little time with each of the most stupid people on earth, and Mary Ellen was proof that even in the Appalachian woods I would not be spared. Bill Bryson
f1b5b81 So Whitney's gin not only helped make many people rich on both sides of the Atlantic but also reinvigorated slavery, turned child labor into a necessity, and paved the way for the American Civil War. Perhaps at no other time in history has someone with a simple, well-meaning invention generated more general prosperity, personal disappointment, and inadvertent suffering than Eli Whitney with his gin. Bill Bryson
cd2bc58 In 1964, the largest earthquake ever recorded in North America rocked Alaska with 200,000 megatons of concentrated might, the equivalent of 2,000 nuclear bombs. Almost 3,000 miles away in Texas, water sloshed out of swimming pools. A street in Anchorage fell twenty feet. The quake devastated 24,000 square miles of wilderness, much of it glaciated. And what effect did all this might have on Alaska's glaciers? None. Bill Bryson
f1b0b06 nostalgia such as can be known only by those who remember the days of hot metal typesetting and noisy composing rooms Bill Bryson
d054fe4 Travel is like love, mostly because it's a heightened state of awareness, in which we are mindful, receptive, undimmed by familiarity and ready to be transformed. That is why the best trips, like the best love affairs, never really end." All love affairs, all long-term relationships--travel included--demand that we keep an element of mystery alive and kicking." Bill Bryson
1eab431 As early colonists employed odd spellings, so too they often brought unexpected pronunciations with them. This was particularly the case in Virginia, where the leading families had a special fondness for pronouncing their family names in improbable ways, so that Sclater became "Slaughter," Munford became "Mumfud," Randolph was "Randall," Wyatt was "Wait," Devereaux was "Deverecks," Callowhill was "Carroll," Higginson was "Hickerson," Norswo.. Bill Bryson
45bb6b3 The Appalachians are the home of one of the world's great hardwood forests Bill Bryson
a5d73d2 explanations, like dreams, only make sense while they're happening. Bill Bryson
1565269 E Pluribus Unum, "One from Many," was taken from, of all places, a recipe for salad in an early poem by Virgil.)" Bill Bryson
bdd7d30 Magazines boomed, too. Advertising revenues leaped 500 percent in the decade, and many publications of lasting importance made their debut: Reader's Digest in 1922, Time in 1923, the American Mercury and Smart Set in 1924, The New Yorker in 1925. Time was perhaps the most immediately influential Bill Bryson
4dde293 Above all, the 1920s was a golden age for newspapers. Newspaper sales in the decade rose by about a fifth, to 36 million copies a day--or 1.4 newspapers for every household. New York City alone had twelve daily papers, and almost all other cities worthy of the name had at least two or three. Bill Bryson
244a301 Look at yourself in the mirror and reflect upon the fact that you are beholding ten thousand trillion cells, and that almost every one of them holds two yards of densely compacted DNA, and you begin to appreciate just how much of this stuff you carry around with you. Bill Bryson
4943f62 Baseball remains one of the most fertile grounds for inventive wordplay in American life. Among the more notable--and on the face of it more bewildering--recent neologisms are to dial 8 for a home run and Linda Ronstadt for a good fastball. Dial 8 comes from the practice among hotels of requiring customers to dial 8 for a long-distance line. Linda Ronstadt, more complicatedly, is an allusion to her song "Blue Bayou," the significance of whi.. Bill Bryson
d93e200 The murder of poor Albert Snyder had one other unusual feature: the people responsible were caught. That didn't actually happen much in America in the 1920s. New York recorded 372 murders in 1927; in 115 of those cases no one was arrested. Where arrests were made, the conviction rate was less than 20 percent. Nationally, according to a survey made by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company--and it is notable that the best records were kept .. Bill Bryson
ada8f96 If all the ice sheets melted, sea levels would rise by 60 metres. Bill Bryson
c26a4a2 Absolute brain size does not tell you everything - It is relative size that matters, a point that is often overlooked. Bill Bryson
934ad2c She had, I realized, Retail Tourette's Syndrome, a compulsion to blurt advice. There was nothing she could do about it. Bill Bryson
7f6a215 If you have a morbid fear of peanut butter sticking to the roof of your mouth, there is a word for it: arachibutyrophobia... And there's a word for describing a sudden breaking off of thought: aposiopesis... When you are just dropping off to sleep and you experience that sudden sensation of falling, there is a word for it: it's a myoclonic jerk. Bill Bryson
2d5fcc4 Some of these words deserve to be better known. Take velleity, which describes a mild desire, a wish or urge too slight to lead to action. Doesn't that seem a useful term? Or how about sluibbergegullion, a seventeenth-century word signifying a worthless or slovenly fellow? Or ugsome, a late medieval word meaning loathsome or disgusting. Bill Bryson
bf794aa If talking pictures could be said to have a father, it was Lee De Forest, a brilliant but erratic inventor of electrical devices of all types. (He had 216 patents.) In 1907, while searching for ways to boost telephone signals, De Forest invented something called the thermionic triode detector. De Forest's patent described it as "a System for Amplifying Feeble Electric Currents" and it would play a pivotal role in the development of broadcas.. Bill Bryson
b61ef08 By comparison, the practice of one Frank Huntington Beebe of keeping two mansions side by side--one to live in, one to decorate over and over--seems admirably restrained. Bill Bryson
79fb21c designed and built the world's first municipal park. This park so captivated the American landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted that he modeled Central Park in New York on it. Bill Bryson
9947bc0 From this I think we can conclude that the definitive English holorime has yet to be written. However, an old children's riddle does seem to come close. It is the one that poses the question "How do you prove in three steps that a sheet of paper is a lazy dog?" The answer: (1) a sheet of paper is an ink-lined plane; (2) an inclined plane is a slope up; (3) a slow pup is a lazy dog." language Bill Bryson
1583e9f The belief that "and" should not be used to begin a sentence is without foundation. And that's all there is to it." Bill Bryson
ae70eb8 noticed on my city map that just up the road was the Musee International de la Croix-Rouge et du Croissant-Rouge (the International Museum of the Red Cross and Red Breakfast Roll), which sounded much more promising to me. Bill Bryson
25e24dd That is why, for instance, horses in New England (as in East Anglia) neigh, while those in the middle states of America (and the Midlands of England) whinny. Bill Bryson
916509f For anyone of a rational disposition, fashion is often nearly impossible to fathom. Throughout many periods of history--perhaps most--it can seem as if the whole impulse of fashion has been to look maximally ridiculous. If one could be maximally uncomfortable as well, the triumph was all the greater. Bill Bryson
c2bfce8 Dressing impractically is a way of showing that one doesn't have to do physical work. Bill Bryson
e864d2e In a sense William Shakespeare's greatest achievement in life wasn't writing Hamlet or the sonnets but just surviving his first year. Bill Bryson
2b36891 It is extraordinary to think that before he settled in London and became celebrated as a playwright, history provides just four recorded glimpses of Shakespeare--at his baptism, his wedding, and the two births of his children. Bill Bryson
1c5cac1 Never has the promise of glowing skin been more dangerously apt than in the early years of the twentieth century when radium was commonly used as a featured ingredient in beauty products. (credit 7.11) Bill Bryson
22373bc Although the Spirit of St. Louis looked metallic, and was often described as such in newspaper reports, only the nose cowling was actually of metal. With only a thin layer of canvas between the pilot and the outside world, the Spirit of St. Louis was deafeningly noisy and unnervingly insubstantial. It would have been rather like crossing the ocean in a tent. Bill Bryson