That I'm absolutely useless at heavy lifting! :D
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That I'm absolutely useless at heavy lifting! :D
I have been doing work cited pages incorrectly since middle school.
Tha Shuckle is capable of doing 48,121,381 damage in one hit.
Bacon isn't quite as disgusting as i thought.
cheaper to buy cards on ebay then amazon or Walmart.
That the computer I'm using has a reset button.
TIL that cardboard tubes make great swords.jk i knew that already. TIL that the Super Single train exists and is a lot harder than the regular one. Why would I do this to myself?
I finally learned how to cross out textlike this.
Just some work stuff. paperwork stuff.
Nah, it's probably just that your current teacher/professor wants you to do it in a different format. There are a million different ways to cite things... MLA, Chicago Style, APA, etc. The way I was taught to cite things at all costs in high school would get me in trouble if I used it now in grad school.
Last interesting thing I learned is that liking or not liking cilantro can be genetic; apparently, a lot of people in the second group dislike it because they have a genetic condition that makes it taste soapy for them. Weird!
I learned about how frame tales work in certain stories.
That only a minority of the House of Lords is a hereditary peer. I felt much better about their powers after that.
My professor's lecture videos doesn't cause me to fall asleep, unlike his in-class lectures.
To turn my music up higher whenever an awkward conversation is occurring behind me.
That despite the name, suspended chords aren't necessarily the result of suspensions (based on approach and resolution); rather, the term has come to indicate a certain chord structure that I wanted to know the name of (root-perfect fourth-perfect fifth). :O
A special mention, however, goes to the Neapolitan chord. I was looking through my music tips and ran across a part where I noted that in minor chords, the 2 is sometimes flatted so it's a major chord instead of the normal diminished. That sounded familiar, and I realized that I had earlier been looking up info on minor chords on Wikipedia when I ran across a chord labeled with an "(N)" instead of a Roman numeral, which I had then followed to the article on the Neapolitan chord. Now I know what that crazy II in SchoolHouse Rock's "Figure Eight" is.