Oh! he's the vicar/reverand/minister!Pug wrote:
no on bothbennisboy wrote:
Also was this right?bennisboy wrote:
1. He gets divored each time.Pug wrote:
yep, too easy i guess. still these:
A man in Chicago marries twenty people and isn't charged with polygamy, although its well publicized. Why not?
There is a shipwreck, probably worth billions of dollars, on the bottom of the sea. It may never be recovered, despite its value. Why?
2. It'll cost more to recover it/ No-one knows where it isbennisboy wrote:
2 miles south of the North pole
good workbennisboy wrote:
Oh! he's the vicar/reverand/minister!
two left and I'm out:
A man is lost in the wilderness. He determines if he is to survive, he will need to leave his camp and walk out. So he douses his campfire and starts out by turning north and walking one mile. He then turns West and walks five miles. Then, he turns North and walks one mile. He figures out he's probably going the wrong way so he attempts to retrace his steps, heading south. After traveling South for two miles, he realizes he missed the turn. He then realizes he is where he started from - next to the campfire he doused earlier in the morning. Where is he?
There is a shipwreck, probably worth billions of dollars, on the bottom of the sea. It may never be recovered, despite its value. Why?
1. At the south pole, my working for this, is you would walk west in a circular manner, thus he HAS to end up where he startedPug wrote:
good workbennisboy wrote:
Oh! he's the vicar/reverand/minister!
two left and I'm out:
A man is lost in the wilderness. He determines if he is to survive, he will need to leave his camp and walk out. So he douses his campfire and starts out by turning north and walking one mile. He then turns West and walks five miles. Then, he turns North and walks one mile. He figures out he's probably going the wrong way so he attempts to retrace his steps, heading south. After traveling South for two miles, he realizes he missed the turn. He then realizes he is where he started from - next to the campfire he doused earlier in the morning. Where is he?
There is a shipwreck, probably worth billions of dollars, on the bottom of the sea. It may never be recovered, despite its value. Why?
YEP!!!Shem wrote:
1. At the south pole, my working for this, is you would walk west in a circular manner, thus he HAS to end up where he startedPug wrote:
good workbennisboy wrote:
Oh! he's the vicar/reverand/minister!
two left and I'm out:
A man is lost in the wilderness. He determines if he is to survive, he will need to leave his camp and walk out. So he douses his campfire and starts out by turning north and walking one mile. He then turns West and walks five miles. Then, he turns North and walks one mile. He figures out he's probably going the wrong way so he attempts to retrace his steps, heading south. After traveling South for two miles, he realizes he missed the turn. He then realizes he is where he started from - next to the campfire he doused earlier in the morning. Where is he?
There is a shipwreck, probably worth billions of dollars, on the bottom of the sea. It may never be recovered, despite its value. Why?
And the last an hardest:
There is a shipwreck, probably worth billions of dollars, on the bottom of the sea. It may never be recovered, despite its value. Why?
Ok, a hint.Pug wrote:
There is a shipwreck, probably worth billions of dollars, on the bottom of the sea. It may never be recovered, despite its value. Why?
There's no water in the sea.
Ship in a bottle?
nopeTetrino wrote:
Ship in a bottle?
It's a space-ship and the sea is the Sea of Tranquility (on the moon).Pug wrote:
Ok, a hint.Pug wrote:
There is a shipwreck, probably worth billions of dollars, on the bottom of the sea. It may never be recovered, despite its value. Why?
There's no water in the sea.
yep, the Eagle has landed.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
It's a space-ship and the sea is the Sea of Tranquility (on the moon).Pug wrote:
Ok, a hint.Pug wrote:
There is a shipwreck, probably worth billions of dollars, on the bottom of the sea. It may never be recovered, despite its value. Why?
There's no water in the sea.
still not answered this one yet.theDude5B wrote:
What number, by adding one, becomes a sound?
The only thing I can think of is using something besides English or an ancient language for the number.theDude5B wrote:
still not answered this one yet.theDude5B wrote:
What number, by adding one, becomes a sound?
"T" was used by the Romans for tetra or 160.
So T + one = tone?
Correct