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Mick Mac Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Robert Poste's Child Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > A lot of people seem to believe that a brand or

> > designer label says something about you. (It

> says

> > you're an idiot.)

>

> Bollox - all that money Quids has wasted.



Do you mean that red and black Troop shellsuit he wears or the big Fila sweatshirt?

When I was very little I used to believe that actors who died in films would audition for the part because they didn't want to live anymore...


I also used to think the that the signs saying "HAZCHEM" was a warning in German, because it sounded more scary!

Cruel I know but when my kids were young, I told them that the ice cream man/women only played music to let the little children know they had run rout of ice cream, so not to pester then!! As I said, very cruel but with four kids, I had it relatively easy on this front as they didn't clock for many many years!! They weren't impressed when the penny dropped though!

BunnyBurrow Wrote:

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> When I was a kid I used to think that the world

> used to actually be black and white, until one day

> someone invented colour.


You was not far from wrong, Actually there is no colour at all it's your Eye and brain that creates the illusion of colour

right-clicking Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> You was not far from wrong, Actually there is no

> colour at all it's your Eye and brain that creates

> the illusion of colour


Well, there are different wavelengths of light which are 'colour', but yes, colour is how your eye/brain perceives them.

Basically White Light is invisible..


When light hits an object ? say, a banana ? the object absorbs some of the light and reflects the rest of it.


Which wavelengths are reflected or absorbed depends on the properties of the object.


For a ripe banana, wavelengths of about 570 to 580 nanometers bounce back.


These are the wavelengths of yellow light.


DulwichFox

When I was young I asked my Dad how new MPs are picked. He told me they all go round the back of the House of Commons, then a man shouts go and the first person to put their hand up wins. I only discovered this wasn't true when I was 18.

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