Sacagawea
Correct!
The expedition met Sacagawea and her French fur-trapper husband, and they hired both as interpreters. Sacagawea also served as guide and medicine woman.
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Ray Bradbury.
Ray Bradbury, who wrote ‘Fahrenheit 451’ among many other books, was a descendant of Mary Perkins Bradbury, who escaped hanging and evaded capture until the trials were discredited.
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Caffeine binds to the adenosine receptor, but because to a nerve cell, caffeine looks like adenosine it doesn't slow down the cell's activity as adenosine would.
Coffee helps us stay awake as it binds to receptors for adenosine in our brain. Instead of slowing down because of the adenosine’s effect, the nerve cells speed up.
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Tea.
Tea is the second most consumed beverage in the world, next to the water. Tea is the only beverage commonly served hot or iced, for any occasion, at anytime, anywhere.
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Diaphragm.
The diaphragm is a thin skeletal muscle that lies at the base of the chest and separates the stomach from the chest. Contract and anti-aliasing when inhaled. This creates a vacuum effect that attracts air into the lungs. When you exhale, the diaphragm relaxes, and so the air is thrown out of the lungs.
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Dennis Rodman.
Both Madonna and Dennis Rodman started dating each other in the mid-1990s, and they remained together for a few months.
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The plan of Schlieffen resulted in a stalemate. This was so because the German high command did not sufficiently commit to that plan.
The plan called for a very token force to be left to defend Germany against a possible French attack in the south. In the meantime, a right-wing was made to come around from the north and crush the French. But the German high command made the left wing too strong and right-wing relatively weak. Thus the right one was not able to break the French and result in a stalemate.
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Metallica.
In 2013, Metallica set a Guinness world record after performing in Antarctica for 120 scientists and competition winners. In the same calendar year, they played in North and South America, Africa, Asia, Europe, and Australia.
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Golf.
On February 6, 1971, Alan Shepard pulled out a makeshift six-iron he had smuggled onboard Apollo 14 and hit two golf balls on the lunar surface, making him the first person to play golf on the Moon.
Britain
Correct!
The 13 original colonies joined together to prepare the Declaration of Independence. They jointly declared independence from British rule on July 4, 1776.
About Trivia Quizzes and Games
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