Примери коришћења Quick fact на Енглеском и њихови преводи на Српски
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Quick Fact 885: For a period of 50 years in the 4th century B.C.
To learn more about this fascinating phenomenon than we can give in a“Quick Fact,” be sure and Google: Friendship Paradox.
Quick Fact 872: Any month that begins on a Sunday will have a Friday the 13th.
In this episode of The Brain Food Show, we begin by discussing a random quick fact involving the curious old practice of mailing children.
Quick Fact 851: On March 13, 1962, the chairman of the U.S.
In this episode of The Brain Food Show,we begin by discussing a random quick fact involving the parents of Ferris Bueller on Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
Quick Fact 849: From 1912 to 1948, art was an official Olympic event.
The Friendship Paradox mentioned in Quick Fact 841 has many other implications as well, and has also inspired research in other areas.
Quick Fact 850:“Nathan” comes from Hebrew word nathan, literally meaning“he has given.”.
Quick Fact 843: The Lone Ranger's sidekick's name, Tonto, means“moron/fool/stupid” in Spanish.
Quick Fact 766: The earliest known record of a Football/Soccer-like sport was in 1004 B.C. in Japan.
Quick Fact 761:“Soccer” was once a popular name for Football in Britain in the sport's earliest days.
Quick Fact 876: Contrary to popular belief, it is no longer thought that the pyramids of Giza were built by slaves.
Quick Fact 770: Only two World Cup finals have been decided on penalties and coincidentally Italy took part in both of them.
Quick Fact 854:“Thesaurus” derives from the Latin“thesaurus,” meaning“treasury, a hoard,” or more figuratively,“repository.”.
Quick Fact 771: During King Edward's reign(1307-1327), he had laws passed against the playing of various football sports.
Quick Fact 886: Victor Lustig was a con-artist who managed to sell the Eiffel Tower to a scrap metal dealer and get away with it.
Quick Fact 890: At Yale-New Haven hospital, economist Keith Chen and psychologist Laurie Stanos taught capuchin monkeys to use money.
Quick Fact 846: The patron saint of protecting against oversleeping is Saint Vitus, who is also the patron of dancers, epileptics, comedians, and actors.
Quick Fact 832: The original Superman character envisioned by Jerry Siegal and Joe Shuster was not the crime fighting hero we know today.
Quick Fact 764: Most of the earliest forms of football were named thus, not because you kicked a ball with your foot, but because they were played on foot.
Quick Fact 844: One of the grandsons of the woman who helped design Hitler's bunker, Karl Bernd Esser, was the chief designer of Saddam Hussein's bunker.
Quick Fact 833: The original 1947 Miracle on 34th Street was given the dreaded“B” rating by the Catholic Legion of Decency due to the mother in the film being divorced.
Quick Fact 888: The Eiffel Tower was not originally meant to be a permanent structure, simply being built to function as the entrance arches to the 1889 World's Fair in Paris.
Quick Fact 835: In 2013, Marina Voinova, a 24-year-old woman from Russia, was looking up an address on“Yandex Panorama,” the Russian version of Google Map's Street View tool.
Quick Fact 883: In 1916, a proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution was that anytime the U.S. wanted to commit and act of war, it should have to be voted on by U.S. citizens.
Quick Fact 877: In 1887 it was made illegal in Canada to attempt to try to get a woman under 21 years old to have sex with you by promising you would marry her if she did.
Quick Fact 845: The United States has been in debt every year in its history except very briefly for about a year around 1835 when the colorful Andrew Jackson was President.
Quick Fact 921: While Arnold Schwarzenegger is best known for his acting and his work while Governor of California, he was actually remarkably successful even before any of that.
Quick Fact 917: Lyman Ward and Cindy Pickett, better known as Mr. and Mrs. Bueller on Ferris Bueller's Day Off, first met on the set of that film and subsequently got married in 1986.