Was sind einige interessante zufällige Fakten?

Apr 30 2021

Antworten

Anilkumar56 Sep 06 2017 at 00:20

Hier ist die Liste von hundert zufälligen Fakten:

  • Der Ton, den wir hören, wenn wir eine neue Textnachricht erhalten, fungiert als Dopamin-Signal und kann bei uns das Gefühl hervorrufen, süchtig nach SMS zu sein.
  • Einer Studie zufolge sinkt der IQ bei Männern beim Multitasking um 15 Punkte, bei Frauen sinkt der IQ um fünf Punkte.
  • Menschen, die sich für Wissenschaft interessieren, beschäftigen sich oft mit Informationen, die im Widerspruch zu ihrer Politik stehen, was sie aufgeschlossener macht.
  • Wenn Sie einen Anruf erhalten, der Sie fragt: „Können Sie mich hören?“ Sagen Sie nicht „Ja“ – der Betrüger am anderen Ende wird dieses „Ja“ verwenden, um Käufe zu bestätigen.
  • Männer bekommen eher Söhne, wenn sie mehr Brüder haben, und eher Töchter, wenn sie mehr Schwestern haben.
  • Laut einer Studie lesen Menschen auf einem Computerbildschirm im Allgemeinen 25 % langsamer als auf einer gedruckten Seite.
  • Humor wird mit Intelligenz und Ehrlichkeit in Verbindung gebracht – deshalb fühlen sich Frauen eher zu Männern mit Sinn für Humor hingezogen.
  • Alle amerikanischen Flaggen auf dem Mond stehen noch, sind aber durch die Sonneneinstrahlung weiß geworden.
  • Das Tier aus „Die Schöne und das Biest“ hat den Kopf eines Büffels, den Körper eines Bären, die Mähne eines Löwen, die Stoßzähne eines Ebers und die Beine eines Wolfes.
  • Mäusesperma ist größer als Elefantensperma.
  • Das Gehirn behandelt Ablehnung (Trennung) wie körperlichen Schmerz.
  • Soda ist so ätzend, dass sich die Flüssigkeit ohne Einlage nach drei Tagen durch die Aluminiumdose fressen würde.
  • Wenn Ihr Name leicht auszusprechen ist, werden die Leute Sie mehr bevorzugen.
  • Nach Angaben der kanadischen Bundesregierung ist der Weihnachtsmann kanadischer Staatsbürger.
  • Die Vorwahl für eine Nummer in Russland ist 007.
  • Mädchen, die großes Vertrauen zu ihren Vätern haben, neigen auch dazu, großes Vertrauen zu ihren Freunden zu haben. S
  • Der Curiosity Mars Rover singt jedes Jahr am 5. August, dem Tag seiner Landung auf dem Mars, „Happy Birthday“.
  • Herumlaufen ohne wahres Ziel wird als „Mopery“ bezeichnet.
  • Sir Isaac Newton brach schon früh die Schule ab, um auf der Farm seiner Familie mitzuhelfen.
  • Weltweit verdienen Frauen$13 trillion but spend $20 Billionen pro Jahr.
  • Apple lässt seine Mitarbeiter manchmal an gefälschten Projekten arbeiten, bis man ihnen vertrauen kann.
  • Lamborghini-Autos wurden erfunden, als der Traktorenhersteller Lamborghini vom Erfinder von Ferrari beleidigt wurde.
  • Der Punkt über den Buchstaben „i“ und „j“ wird „Tittle“ genannt – das Kreuz über einem „t“ wird „Tattle“ genannt.
  • Ein Puma, ein Puma und ein Berglöwe sind alle ein und dasselbe Tier.
  • Die meisten klugen Schüler helfen Schülern mit Schwierigkeiten nicht.
  • 90 % der Textnachrichten werden innerhalb von 3 Minuten nach ihrer Zustellung gelesen.
  • Paare, die Pronomen wie „wir“, „unser“ und „uns“ verwenden, lösen Konflikte besser als diejenigen, die „ich“, „ich“ und „du“ verwenden.
  • Bestimmte Menschen reagieren nicht nur allergisch auf Katzen, es ist auch möglich, dass bestimmte Katzen allergisch auf Menschen reagieren.
  • Menschen, die große Geheimnisse verbergen, leiden häufiger unter Kopfschmerzen, Rückenschmerzen und Übelkeit.
  • Das Singen während der morgendlichen Dusche kann tatsächlich dabei helfen, das Immunsystem zu stärken, die Stimmung zu verbessern und Ihnen zu einem besseren Tag zu verhelfen.
  • Wenn die Welt auf 100 Menschen verkleinert würde, würden 48 von weniger als 2 Dollar pro Tag leben.
  • Um schlechte Bakterien in der Dusche zu vermeiden, sollten Sie diese eine Weile laufen lassen, bevor Sie hineingehen.
  • Die kürzeste Horrorgeschichte der Welt ist nur zwei Sätze lang: „Der letzte Mann auf Erden saß allein in einem Zimmer. Es klopfte an der Tür.“
  • Alle fünf Sekunden werden in den USA 60.000 Plastiktüten verbraucht.
  • Wenn Sie sich nach einer erholsamen Nacht immer noch müde fühlen, sind Sie wahrscheinlich dehydriert. Trinken Sie nach dem Aufwachen etwas Wasser.
  • In China gibt es 64 Millionen leerstehende Häuser, darunter ganze Städte, die leer stehen.
  • „Billie Jean“ handelte von einem Mädchen, das eines Morgens über Michael Jacksons Mauer kletterte und ihn beschuldigte, der Vater einer ihrer Zwillinge zu sein.
  • Ungeborene Babys trinken ihren eigenen Urin.
  • Gerades Sitzen im Stuhl schadet dem Rücken. Stattdessen sollten Sie sich in einem Winkel von 135 Grad beugen.
  • In einem Stadtbus ist man in den USA 60-mal sicherer als in einem Auto
  • Täglich werden 1,7 Milliarden Portionen Coca-Cola verkauft.
  • Die Sonne ist 400-mal größer als der Mond, aber auch 400-mal weiter von der Erde entfernt, sodass die beiden Körper am Himmel gleich groß erscheinen.
  • Auf dem Jupiter kann es zu einer dreifachen Sonnenfinsternis kommen, bei der drei Monde gleichzeitig Schatten auf den Planeten werfen.
  • Wer täglich mehrere Tassen Kaffee trinkt, erkrankt am seltensten an Diabetes.
  • Vierzig ist die einzige Zahl, deren Buchstaben alphabetisch geordnet sind.
  • 40 % der Landfläche der Welt liegen in 6 Ländern.
  • Ihre Musikvorlieben können darüber entscheiden, wie schlau oder dumm Sie sind.
  • Das Unternehmen „Nike“ sollte ursprünglich „Dimension 6“ heißen.
  • Wenn Sie vor 7 Jahren Bitcoin im Wert von 100 US-Dollar gekauft hätten, würden Sie jetzt auf 73 Millionen US-Dollar sitzen.
  • Ungefähr 100 Milliarden Menschen haben auf der Erde gelebt.
  • In Supermärkten verstecken sich Milchprodukte und andere wichtige Dinge an der Rückwand, sodass man durch den gesamten Laden gehen muss, um an sie zu gelangen.
  • Der Weltraum ist schwarz, weil sich das Universum ständig ausdehnt – die einzige nahegelegene Lichtquelle ist die Sonne.
  • Wenn Sie einen Juckreiz im Hals verspüren, kratzen Sie sich am Ohr.
  • „Tod durch PowerPoint“ ist ein Begriff, der sich auf die intensive Langeweile/den Hass gegenüber nutzlosen PowerPoint-Präsentationen bezieht.
  • Die NASA nutzte erstmals 1962 computerberechnete Mathematik – davor erledigte sie ihre gesamte Mathematik von Hand.
  • Wenn Sie einen Raum betreten und vergessen, warum Sie ihn überhaupt betreten haben, entsteht das Phänomen, das als „Ereignisgrenze“ bekannt ist.
  • Die Sonne macht alle 25-35 Tage einmal eine vollständige Rotation.
  • Wenn man den Kopf einer Stecknadel auf die Temperatur des Sonnenmittelpunkts erhitzt, tötet er jeden im Umkreis von 1.600 Kilometern.
  • Die Sonne macht 99 % der Masse unseres Sonnensystems aus.
  • Forscher haben herausgefunden, dass der durchschnittliche Mensch im Laufe seines Lebens etwa 400 Freundschaften schließt, aber nur 33 von Dauer sind.
  • Ein ungeborenes Baby kann schmecken, was seine Mutter isst, und eine Vorliebe für die Lebensmittel entwickeln, die es isst.
  • "Going to your happy place" reduces operative pain.
  • We change our voice when we talk to people we like.
  • Night vision goggles are green because the human eye can tell difference between more shades of green than any other color.
  • Pirates wore eye patches to have one eye adjusted for the top deck and the other already adjusted for the darkness when going below deck.
  • Babies can typically start making simple jokes at 9 months of age.
  • Michael Jackson was so desperate to play the role of Spiderman in the movie that in the 1990s he tried to buy Marvel Comics.
  • Men and women have the exact same hormones -- the differences lie in the hormone levels and patterns.
  • Girls outperform boys in educational achievement in 70% of the world.
  • It can take 200 years for a human to count to 7 billion out loud.
  • Reading can make you more empathetic and open to new experiences.
  • Listening to information while sleeping can allow you to remember it better.
  • Relationships are stronger and tend to last longer when both people are afraid of losing one another
  • An elephant can smell water up to 3 miles away.
  • People who feel depressed in the winter and happier in the summer are said to suffer from "Seasonal Affective Disorder."
  • On average, 27,000 trees are chopped down every day just to make toilet paper.
  • London has the most billionaires of any city in the world.
  • If your definition of "famous" is "notable enough to have a Wikipedia page," then one out of every 10,000 people on Earth today are famous.
  • When a black hole consumes a star, it belches out huge "spitballs" of gas that weigh as much as several Jupiters.
  • File-sharing is an official religion in Sweden.
  • Your reflection in a spoon is upside-down because the photons bounce off the concave surface differently than a flat one.
  • "Game of Thrones" has the same production budget as "Friends" - $10 million an episode.
  • The surface area of a cat, including all the fur, is roughly equivalent to the surface area of a Ping-Pong table.
  • Scientists claim that chins have no use and humans have prominent chins as a side effect of the rest of the face evolving to be smaller.
  • North Korea is the world’s only necrocracy—the only government that still operates under the rules of a former, dead leader.
  • Your face turns red when you're angry because your heart is beating faster to send more blood to your muscles, preparing you for a fight.
  • George Washington preferred not to shake the hands of visitors. He would bow instead.
  • Ice cubes look white due to oxygen and other impurities. If the water is boiled before it's frozen, the resulting ice cubes will be clear.
  • Netflix was founded on August 29th, 1997 – Nearly 20 years ago.
  • Inside your belly button are thousands of bacteria that form an ecosystem the size of a rainforest.
  • Ironically, more energy is used to manufacture a hybrid than a traditional car, which results in greater amounts of air pollution.
  • The giraffe has the highest blood pressure in the animal world because its heart must pump hard against gravity to reach its head.
  • NASA has two satellites named Tom and Jerry that chase each other, measuring gravitational anomalies in the distance between them.
  • Stomach rumblings are caused by air moving through your digestive tract and doesn’t always mean you are hungry.
  • "Dammit I'm Mad" is a palindrome and can be read the same way when spelled backwards.
  • A thin mirror tends to bend under its own weight and distort reflections, so if you want to know how you really look, get a thick mirror.
  • It takes 9 hours, 36 minutes, and 10 seconds to reach the 1,048,576th row of an Excel spreadsheet by perpetually pressing the down arrow.
  • The more a child practices an instrument, the better they are at paying attention, managing anxiety, and controlling their emotions.
  • Human muscles are limited by our brain – we actually have the strength to move cars and boulders.
  • The human brain can read up to 1,000 words per minute.

Happy Reading .

AyushShukla127 Jun 24 2019 at 19:31

1

Some Cats Are Actually Allergic to Humans

Though it’s uncommon—since humans bathe more than your typical animal, and don’t shed as much hair or skin—some animals can still be allergic to humans. (However, it’s most often because of the perfume or cologne we wear or the soap we use.) And for more great info about pets, check out the 15 Signs Your dog Is Depressed.

2

Too Much Water Can Kill You

Drinking too much water can be lethal. When guzzling a ton of liquid, you can suffer from something called “water intoxication,” which either occurs after an obscene amount of water is guzzled or too many fluids were consumed during hardcore, endurance exercise. If this sounds preposterous, know that the 2002 Boston Marathon competitor Cynthia Lucero died due to overhydration. (Yikes.)

3

The Hottest Temperature Ever Recorded on Earth Was 2 Billion Degrees Kelvin

To give you a sense of how hot that is: The interior of our sun is 15 million degrees Kelvin. Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories produced the record-breaking temperature in their lab using a superheated gas—equal to about 3.6 billion degrees Fahrenheit, which is definitely warmer than anything you could create on your stove.

4

Green Eggs and Ham Started as a Bet

The Dr. Seuss classic grew out of a bet with his editor that he could not create a book using fewer than 50 different words. The editor, Bennett Cerf , founder of Random House, put—you guessed it—$50 on the line, and lost.

5

Competitive Art Used to Be in the Olympics

Between 1912 and 1948, the Olympic Games awarded medals in sculpture, music, painting, and architecture. After the Olympics were skipped during the war years, it returned in 1948, but after a debate, the competitions were scrapped.

“John Copley of Britain won one of the final medals awarded, a silver in 1948 for his engraving, Polo Players,” according to Smithsonian.com | Smithsonian Magazine | Smithsonian. “He was 73 years old at the time, and would be the oldest medalist in Olympic history if his victory still counted.”

6

The Majority of Your Brain Is Fat

You can literally call someone a fathead—about 60 percent of the human brain is made of fat. And for more ridiculous knowledge about human physiology, check out these 20

7

A Chef’s Hat Has Exactly 100 Pleats

A chef’s tall toque traditionally is made with 100 pleats, meant to represent the “hundred ways to cook an egg.”

8.

The Moon Is (Slowly) Slowing the Earth’s Rotation

Every one hundred years, the Moon adds approximately 1.7 milliseconds to a day. While this may be minuscule, it does add up: Over the past 350 million years, the Earth’s rotation has slowed by about an hour.

9.

Oranges Aren’t Naturally Occurring Fruitsl

Oranges may be a classic fruit, but they are not actually a naturally occurring one. Fact: the sweet fruits we love are actually a hybrid of tangerines and pomelos, also known as “Chinese grapefruit,” which is a pale green or yellow color.

Originally cultivated in southeast Asia, they were originally green before the skin turned orange in warmer climates. However, regardless of where it came from, it will always be one of the 50 Foods That Will Make You Look Younger!

10

High Heels Were Originally Worn by Men

In the 10th century, men in Europe adopted the now-classic fashion choice of heels to make it easier to ride their horses. Adding heels to their boots made it easier to stay in their stirrups.

As Slate explained, “The Persian cavalry wore inch-high heels, and the trend spread to Europe. Since they showed that the wearer owned and maintained horses, high heels became associated with the upper class.”

11

You Are Drinking Million-Year-Old Water

Because the cycle of evaporation, condensation, and precipitation is closed, the same water that existed on the earth millions of years ago is still on Earth today. It just keeps recycling itself over and over—so you might want to put that liquid through the Brita filter an extra time or two!

12

Queen Elizabeth Is a Trained Mechanic

The Queen is actually quite handy. When she was 16, she joined the British employment agency the Labour Exchange, where she learned the basics of truck repair. You know: how to change a tire, fix engines, and drive ambulances. Nowadays, she has others who can do such things for her, but it’s nice to know if one of her cars broke down, the Queen might be able to get it back up and running. And for more coverage of our favorite monarch, Here’s Queen Elizabeth Looking Utterly Dazzled by Justin Trudeau.

13

Also… The Queen Has an Insane Car Collection

Perhaps that early understanding of automobiles inspired the Queen’s lifelong love of cars. Her collection of Rolls-Royces, Daimlers, Bentleys, and other brands is estimated to be worth £10 million.

14.

New York Was Briefly Naned “New Orange”

New Amsterdam was founded by the Dutch in 1653 and taken renamed New York by the English in 1664. However, the Dutch briefly reclaimed it in 1673 and dubbed it New Orange, which was its name for about a year until it was returned to the British under the Treaty of Westminster.

15

There Was a Successful Tinder Match in Antarctica in 2014

The dating app is popular across six continents, but it didn’t have a connection on the least-inhabited one until 2014, when a pair of research scientists—a man working at Antarctica’s McMurdo Station and a woman camping a 45-minute helicopter ride away—found they matched.

16

Moonshiners Used “Cow Shoes” to Disguise Their Footprints During Prohibition

To keep their whiskey stills from being spotted, moonshiners during prohibition would often wear “cow shoes“—shoes with special blocks attached to the bottoms—which would make their footprints look like a cow’s.

17

Amelia Earhart and Eleanor Roosevelt Once Went on a Joyride

In 1933, the two high-profile women ditched a fancy dinner in Washington, D.C., and hopped into an Easter Air Transport Curtiss Condor and flew to Baltimore.

18

It Takes Exactly 364 Licks to Get to the Center of a Tootsie Pop

A group of engineering students at Purdue University designed a machine to answer the classic question, “how many licks does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie Pop?,” and found that the answer was 364.

For what it’s worth: There’s still debate over this question. A doctorate student at the University of Michigan determined the answer to be 411, while a group of students at Swarthmore Junior High School determined it to be just 144. Go figure.

19

Tree Rings Get Wider During Wet Years

You probably already knew that tree rings can tell you how old a tree is. But they can also show you the conditions of a given year, with thinner rings during drought years and thick ones when there was significant rainfall.

20

The Hottest Inhabited Place in the World is in Ethiopia

Dallol, Ethiopia, reaches an average annual temperature of 95 degrees Fahrenheit. The hottest month had an average of 116.1 degrees Fahrenheit.

21

Hot Water Freezes Faster Than Cold Water

Crazy, right? A number of explanations have been suggested for “the Mpemba effect,” including one that posits that warm containers conduct heat more efficiently, and another that warm water evaporates faster.

22

Dolphins Have Names for Each Other

You’ve probably heard that dolphins are pretty clever, but this is pretty impressive: The animals actually have names for one another, using a unique whistle to distinguish between different members within their pod.

23

Shel Silverstein Wrote the Song “A Boy Named Sue”

That famed Johnny Cash song was actually penned by the famed children’s book poet behind works such as Where the Sidewalk Ends , The Giving Tree, and A Light in the Attic . He also wrote songs performed by Emmylou Harris , Waylon Jennings , Loretta Lynn , and more.

24

The Bowler Hat Was Invented as a Safety Measure

The familiar bowler hat may look fashionable, but it began as a purely practical item—a riding helmet meant to protect riders from branches and other obstacles. It was designed by London hatmakers Thomas and William Bowler —hence, the name.

25

Sea Otters Hold Hands While They Sleep

This ridiculously cute behavior is an effort to avoid floating away from their partner during sleep. Sometimes they hold hands in groups, producing a “raft.”

26

Stop Signs Used to Be Yellow

The first stop sign appeared in Detroit in 1915 and for the first years of its use across the country, it was made in a wide range of colors, before settling on a consistent one in the 1920s: yellow. The idea was that this color would have the greatest amount of visibility for both day and night (red looked dark at night). That changed in 1954, with the invention of fade-resistant red coatings, which made it easier to spot.

27

Platform Shoes Once Symbolized Status

More footwear trivia: raised platform shoes (also known as “buskins”) were worn by tragic actors in Ancient Greece to symbolize their superiority over comic actors, who wore plain socks.

28

Dandelion has a Dirty Meaning

Be careful about drinking any dandelion wine—the French word for dandelion, pissenlit , means “wet the bed.” This name comes from the fact that dandelion leaves have diuretic properties.

29

Andy Warhol Inspired Louboutins’ Red Soles

Louboutins shoes are known as much for their high price as their red soles, but many don’t know that the color was inspired by the artist Andy Warhol , whose Flowers drawing caught Christian Louboutin ‘s eye and gave him the idea (with the aid of an assistant’s red nail polish) to add the color to the bottom of the kicks.

30

Winston Churchill’s Mother Was from Brooklyn

Though one of the UK’s most famous leaders, wartime prime minister and career politician Winston Churchill has deep U.S. roots. His mother, Lady Randolph Churchill , was born Jennie Jerome in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. As daughter of financier and sportsman Leonard Jerome , she was born into significant wealth.

31

Oranges Were First Planted in U.S. in 1513

Florida and oranges go way back—in what is now Florida, Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon planted the first orange tree in 1513. Five centuries later, the product continues to thrive in the Sunshine State.

32

“OMG” Usage Can Be Traced to 1917

One of the earliest uses—perhaps the earliest use—of the acronym “O.M.G” appears in a letter to Winston Churchill. In 1917, retired Admiral of the British Navy John Arbuthnot Fisher wrote to Churchill (then a British Member of Parliament) about rumors he had heard about new titles that would soon be bestowed. “I hear that a new order of Knighthood is on the tapis,” he wrote. “O.M.G. (Oh! My God!)—Shower it on the Admirality!!”

33

Toto the Dog Was Once a Cow

In the 1910 silent film version of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Dorothy did not have a dog but a faithful cow named Imogene. It’s not clear why they opted for the change—Toto was in the 1902 stage rendition and L. Frank Baum‘s book.

34

Reno Is Farther West Than Los Angeles

San Diego, too—check the map.

35

Horses Sleep in 15-Minute Bursts

Horses don’t need as much sleep as you might expect for an animal so large. Altogether, they sleep about three or four hours a day, and that is done in 10- and 15-minute bursts, often locking their joints and standing while they do.

36

Horses Also Have the Largest Eyes of Any Mammal

No wonder they do so well in battle. Horses’ eyes are larger than any other mammal’s (at about 2 inches in diameter) are able to move independently and—due to their placement on the sides of their heads—can get a near-360-degree view of their surroundings (outside of a pair of blind spots directly in front and behind them).

37

Speed Dating Was Invented by a Rabbi

While we might think of it as an innovative way to meet people, it was a very traditional person who invented speed dating. Rabbi Yaacov Deyo, based in Beverly Hills, CA, created the concept in 1998, bringing togethera handful of single men and women for some matchmaking in a Peet’s Coffee & Tea. Romance and efficiency proved to be a perfect match.

38

Parrots Have the Power of Reason

In addition to humans and chimps, the African Grey Parrot has been found to be able to reason—approximately at the level of a three-year-old kid. In an experiment, the parrot was presented with a pair of closed canisters, with food inside one of them, which they were shown. After this, when given a chance to choose between canisters, they consistently selected the one with food. Additionally, more complex studies have found the parrots to be able to piece together similar puzzles.

39

The blob of toothpaste that sits on your toothbrush has a name.

It’s called a “nurdle.” And for more funny words, know the 100 Slang Terms from the 20th Century No One Uses Anymore.

40

Weeds Can Be Healthy

Obwohl wir sie normalerweise einfach ausreißen und in den Müll werfen, haben einige Unkräuter nährende Eigenschaften. Löwenzahn ist beispielsweise reich an Vitamin A, C und K – ganz zu schweigen von Kalzium, Eisen, Mangan und Kalium. Denken Sie also darüber nach, diese Unkräuter umzufunktionieren und daraus einen Salat zu machen.

Ich hoffe es hat euch gefallen..

Grüße..