Tema: Re: klausimai smegenims:)
Autorius: CatBlack
Data: 2011-01-04 17:41:25
Ne is to galo irodineji. Visos tavo isvardintos medziagos sudarytos is anglies.

"Justas" <liarva@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:ifv7uh$482$1@trimpas.omnitel.net...
ok, tiks ir charcoal :)
tada dar tinka: black paper, black cigarette, nigerian prostitute (jei 
su gilia mintim)

On 2011.01.04 14:53, Kuujis@work wrote:
> Čia tu rimtai? Kažkoks random link įrodo tavo teisumą? :)
>
> Nusiperkam:
> ir anglis ir medžio anglis juoda*
>
> Dega/rusena:
> Gaunasi žarijos... SHOCKA! raudonos*
>
> Sudegus:
> Pelenai ir dar pilki*....
>
> * - galimos spalvų variacijos.
>
> "Justas" <liarva@yahoo.com> wrote in message
> news:ifv2bt$qc9$1@trimpas.omnitel.net...
>> Though many people think "charcoal" is the answer. Charcoal isn't red
>> when you're using it nor grey when you throw it away. Coal and
>> charcoal are entirely different.
>> Coal is red when it's aglow, grey as ash when it's thrown away.
>>
>>
>> Read more:
>> http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_black_when_you_buy_it_red_when_you_use_it_and_gray_when_you_throw_it_away#ixzz1A4EvDAQO
>>
>>
>> On 2011.01.04 11:47, Kuujis@work wrote:
>>> char coal yra tai ką gamindavo būrai miškuose, t.y. medžio anglis.
>>> Kaitinta ir deginta be deguonies.
>>>
>>> Iš esmės abu atsakymai tinka.
>>>
>>> "pranZo" <pranas@gabija.net> wrote in message
>>> news:ifuq79$cic$1@trimpas.omnitel.net...
>>>> coal - anglis, iskasena.
>>>> charcoal - anglys, kietas kuras.
>>>>
>>>> "Milordas" <no@spam.lt> wrote in message
>>>> news:ifuoji$9ok$1@trimpas.omnitel.net...
>>>>> niekad nepirkes medzio angliu?
>>>>>
>>>>> "Justas" <liarva@yahoo.com> wrote in message
>>>>> news:ifunan$7hg$1@trimpas.omnitel.net...
>>>>>> 13 neteisingai. Turetu buti Coal.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On 2011.01.03 18:59, Toxis wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Solutions
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> 1. The man is very, very short and can only reach halfway up the
>>>>>>> elevator buttons. However, if it is raining then he will have his
>>>>>>> umbrella with him and can press the higher buttons with it.
>>>>>>> 2. The surgeon was his mother.
>>>>>>> 3. It was day time.
>>>>>>> 4. At the time she went into labor, the mother of the twins was
>>>>>>> traveling by boat. The older twin, Terry, was born first early on
>>>>>>> March 1st. The boat then crossed a time zone and Kerry, the
>>>>>>> younger twin, was born on February the 28th. Therefore, the
>>>>>>> younger twin celebrates her birthday two days before her older
>>>>>>> brother.
>>>>>>> 5. A square manhole cover can be turned and dropped down the
>>>>>>> diagonal
>>>>>>> of the manhole. A round manhole cannot be dropped down the
>>>>>>> manhole. So for safety and practicality, all manhole covers should
>>>>>>> be round.
>>>>>>> 6. The poison in the punch came from the ice cubes. When the man
>>>>>>> drank the punch, the ice was fully frozen. Gradually it melted,
>>>>>>> poisoning the punch.
>>>>>>> 7. He recognized Adam and Eve as the only people without navels.
>>>>>>> Because they were not born of women, they had never had umbilical
>>>>>>> cords and therefore they never had navels. This one seems
>>>>>>> perfectly logical but it can sometimes spark fierce theological
>>>>>>> arguments. (Just what a HUMOR list needs!!) ;^)
>>>>>>> 8. They were two of a set of triplets (or quadruplets, etc.). This
>>>>>>> puzzle stumps many people. They try outlandish solutions involving
>>>>>>> test-tube babies or surrogate mothers. Why does the brain search
>>>>>>> for complex solutions when there is a much simpler one available?
>>>>>>> 9. The man had hiccups. The barman recognized this from his speech
>>>>>>> and drew the gun in order to give him a shock. It worked and cured
>>>>>>> the hiccups--so the man no longer needed the water. The is a
>>>>>>> simple puzzle to state but a difficult one to solve. It is a
>>>>>>> perfect example of a seemingly irrational and incongruous
>>>>>>> situation having a simple and complete explanation. Amazingly this
>>>>>>> classic puzzle seems to work in different cultures and languages.
>>>>>>> 10. The third. Lions that haven't eaten in three years are dead.
>>>>>>> 11. The woman was a photographer. She shot a picture of her husband,
>>>>>>> developed it, and hung it up to dry.
>>>>>>> 12. Freeze them first. Take them out of the jugs and put the ice in
>>>>>>> the barrel. You will be able to tell which water came from which
>>>>>>> jug.
>>>>>>> 13. The answer is Charcoal.
>>>>>>> 14. Sure you can: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow!
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Alternate Solutions
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> 4. Because one of them did not necessarily celebrate their birthday
>>>>>>> on the day they were born, but celebrated later or earlier. Much
>>>>>>> simpler than having Mom giving birth while crossing the
>>>>>>> International Date Line and tossing in a Leap Year and the like.
>>>>>>> Needlessly complicated.
>>>>>>> 6. Because he was the one who put the poison in the punch. Of course
>>>>>>> he wouldn't drink any *after* he poisoned it. Who goes to the
>>>>>>> effort of making poison ice cubes, except Bond villains and those
>>>>>>> bad guys in the "Encyclopedia Brown" mystery stories we read in
>>>>>>> elementary school?
>>>>>>> 8. Because they were adopted. It's a coincidence they were born on
>>>>>>> the same exact day. OK, so Occam's Razor could be applied equally
>>>>>>> to both solutions...
>>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>