There are more concussions per capita in girls soccer than boys football. There absolutely is a comparable amount of concussions in soccer compared to other sports.
https://www.webmd.com/brain/news/20170315/which-high-school-sport-has-the-most-concussions
From bing point of view: (X-Comment from /r/MildlyInteresting)
This one book I read in elementary school says Tiger Woods would've hit a hole in one if the ball hadn't hit a random bee that was just chilling on the green next to the hole. Do you have to retake the shot, or is it a choice?
They’re pretty common in my area. But I looked it up and amazon sells them
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0041YLWNA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_RheRCbVZK6BK4
They’re not really “minty,” they’re sweet, a little tangy and chewy
I wouldn’t recommend buying a 12 pack lol. They’re good but they’re literally the candy you see at the checkout and think “huh, I haven’t had these in a while”
The gif makes a pretty funny concept for a smartphone game. Kinda like all the other bowling games, but with untraditional lanes like this skatepark and other wack shit you would only see in Mario Kart. Someone, make this for Android and call it Balls of Duty: Modern Bowling FREE
EDIT: There are a lot of crappy Bowling apps, but this looks pretty funny: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.actionsim.angryragdollbo
EDIT: It was awful.
Have you seen Manolas' owngoal in Barcelona-AsRoma? It is surprisingly similar to the gif situation, but in reality, the ball went through the legs of the first player, hit the knee of Manolas, and then it went right into the top corner
Edit: this is the goal
The ball didnt go in the top corner, but It looks like from the alternate angle
Don't spread misinformation. Certificates are free through services such as LetsEncrypt and AWS.
Moreover, "something that needs privacy" is subjective. I would argue all of my internet activity should be private. HTTPS is also good for more than just privacy, since it validates the content I'm receiving hasn't been tampered with.
It's a Google app that sometimes sends you surveys about stores you went, what you like to watch on YouTube, etc: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.apps.paidtasks
Remember, you never went to the water park.
I'm not a scientist, but I split this gif.
https://ezgif.com/split/ezgif-1-1790a925e0.gif
I can't tell by the pictures even split up what happened, but it's possible he hit it so hard and fast the hood immediately tore off and flew over the car. Or the journalist was just sensationalizing another news story. I don't know what happened to it.
This is a really neat example of the magnus effect! You can see the ball doesn't follow the path it should, but rather curves in the direction of its rotation. It's pretty apparent at such a high rotational velocity.
so i don't know if this was the right way to go about it but i tried to check the force at which she was hit in the back of the head. i used this i put the weight of object as 50lbs and the speed at 5mph. Came up with being hit by something that is akin to roughly 300lbs. don't know if that's exactly the best thing for determining this, though i doubt it.
Sync? It's a Reddit app for Android devices (and an excellent one, by the way). Link to Sync Pro
Not sure how it works exactly, but when you watch OP's video it has the original audio. I think it must be identifying and serving the original video upload rather than Gfycat's soundless output.
I used to empty eggs for pysanky all the time, it just takes a hole at the top of the egg and a little metal straw-like tool that you use to stir the egg up. The tool is then used to blow air into the egg upside down.
Air goes into the egg, egg insides come out the hole and down into a bowl or trash underneath!
The only thing I can assume you're talking about is NASA's planned mission to knock an asteroid out of orbit that year, because I couldn't find much else interesting with asteroids in 2022. However, according to them:
"The asteroid poses no threat to Earth and is an ideal test target, NASA said."
https://weather.com/en-IN/india/science/news/2019-05-08-nasa-spacecraft-to-hit-an-asteroid-in-2022
This I why I use NordVPN. Ever wanted to watch your favourite TV show but it isn't available in [insert country]? Well, in [insert country] they get favourite TV show right there on Netflix. NordVPN allows you to browse and watch whatever you want. FBI can't touch you.
Try NordVPN today using the discount code 'penispills' to get 5% off your lifetime plan.
TODAY.
That is not one I have tried, and I have tried probably 20 - 30 different sauces now looking for an alternative.
The best deal I have found is to just get the 64oz bottle for $15.
Also if you have not used it yet, you can get the 3 large bottle gift pack for $4.99 shipped on Amazon if you do the subscribe and save thing. Just cancel subscribe and save once it arrives.
There’s someone else in this thread who replied to me with a more complete history.
My understanding of its history came from this book: https://www.amazon.com/Forensics-Burns-Prints-About-Crime/dp/0802125158
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/alabama/bunyan-hill-wild-horse-wagon-trail-loop?p=-1
This is the trail I would recommend the most. It has it all: fat man squeeze, waterfalls, big rocks, river crossing, pine forest. The elevation isn't bad and the trail is frequently traveled enough you can see it. The river crossing is probably the trickiest part.
I'll also direct both of you to: /r/nothingeverhappens
This isn't even that unbelievable lmao the seat catches air causing the chair to open up.
But no, DuDe sO FakeE
No, I looked it up and the rule depends on the country/ region (Eg Switzerland only uses ss) but ß should be used after a long vowel/ diphthong and ss everywhere else. At least officially.
Hello, I'm a bot! The movie you linked is called Ultraviolet, here are some Trailers
Yes, we could look it up! What a great idea.
We just keep her on her harness, and then connect one of these into the seatbelt buckle.
Harness is easier since it connects at her chest area, might be a little tougher if you connected it straight to a collar.
We usually do it on one of the backseat closest to the window so she can still stick her snoot out. :)
Sure! We just keep her on her harness, and then connect one of these into the seatbelt buckle.
Harness is easier since it connects at her chest area, might be a little tougher if you connected it straight to a collar.
We usually do it on one of the backseat closest to the window so she can still stick her snoot out. :)
When I've been away I've never had any luck getting ExpressVPN working with iPlayer. Works fine with All4 and used it for the RTÉ player once to watch the GAA, but iPlayer always knows you're on a VPN.
According to this article on biomechanics, around 30% of the running cycle is spent in the "double float" phase.
For a rough estimate:
0.3^6 = 0.000729 = 0.0729% or 1/1372 chance of them all being in the double float phase simultaneously.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/collide
No where does it specify that both have to be moving. "The two cars collided". Guess what one was parked. It's no different then saying the car collided with the tree. You are making the assumption that both were in motion when there is no evidence or claim, or grounds to make that assumption off of. Other then the fact you don't know the definition to a very simple word.
Ok even if you don't use any of those things, why would you want to run Youtube's code on your computer?
Shit like this would be impossible if people refused to run JS by default: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7790725/javascript-track-mouse-position
I thought double *bows were color inverted but this doesn't look like that. Not that I'm saying a 'moonbow' doesn't exist...
​
"While a primary rainbow is visible when light is reflected once off the back of a raindrop, a secondary and usually dimmer rainbow is spotted when light is reflected twice in a more complicated pattern.
The colors of the second rainbow are inverted, with blue on the outside and red moved to the inside. The second bow appears dimmer or cloudier because much more light is released from two reflections, and both bows cover a larger portion of the sky."
https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/what-is-a-double-rainbow-1/33889
You think that because you don't know me, which is fair enough, but more importantly you don't know what you're talking about either.
I worked on GDPR compliance for a blue-chip market research company and one of its blue-chip clients, for a year. Now that is challenging, as it involves varying degrees of user data, and multiple layers of historical consent - and certainly does need lawyers.
A small-town newspaper website, not so much. I've personally prepared around 40 small websites for GDPR since it was launched as a piece of legislation, European and non-EU, and it takes about 5 minutes per site to do.
You can above full compliance by installing a single WordPress plugin. Or just by [reading a short blog post](https://elementor.com/blog/gdpr-guidelines/]. It's not about what you do with data, it's about transparency.
That so many US companies have not bothered with this after nearly 3 years (even though no other non-EU locations seem to have this issue, from the Far East to Australia) is just sheer laziness. Or perhaps just insularity.
According to <em>Probabilities in the Game of Monopoly</em> and <em>Monopoly Jail Probabilities by Chris Emerson on Prezi</em> , there is a probability of 81/400 or a 20.25% chance that on any individual turn a single player will land in jail.
Given that in the photo there are 4 players and assuming that each turn is independent of the previous turn, we can use some simple statistical analysis to find that the total probability of 4 players landing in jail on consecutive turns is (81/400)^4. To find a percentage, multiply this number by 100 resulting in a 16.8% chance of 4 players consecutively landing in jail.
Not OP, but I'm pretty positive I've got the exact same vacuum. I immediately recognized it when I saw this post, it works great. Here's a link to it on Amazon.
I didn't believe you but lo and behold here they are on Amazon selling quarters for $10. There literally is a million ways to make a buck in the US.
ALDI Keychain, ALDI Quarter, ADLI Cart Quarter https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0713PX8VG/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_ZQSsDbRVJ8J1P
They're actually for kids, if you believe the Amazon page. But I don't see how because kid scissors suck, and these are actually sharp as hell.
Check out the book Bringing Columbia Home by Leinbach and Ward, it’s a truly incredible story of how they tracked and found everything and reconstructed the shuttle, and how these small towns went way above and beyond helping NASA find remains.
Try amazon smile to donate to a charity of your choice automatically at no cost to you!
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Mine is in store at my local range.
This is the best one on amazon. But they go down to $50 for 12 at reasonable quality .
This is what I use to stock my university club, it’s 36 for around $120.
All this is in canadian but there are far cheaper options on the US site. I wouldn’t fully recommend these for extreme compound bows as you would have to rotate them out every year or two depending on how frequently you use them. But for most recurve and midrange compounds they should be fine.
If you don't like all the zynga rubbish and just want a scrabble that works well and runs on older devices, check out Wordfeud instead.
Ah - might want to look into a better app...
If you're on Android, my personal recommendation would be Boost for reddit. I know Sync and Relay also seem to be popular choices, too.
you see wood that's been deformed into the hole around the nail and toward the point a ribbed pattern because it's a ring shank nail.
It's cool, I won't torture you anymore with it. It's fun to think about infinite universes and all the possibilities that idea offers. Without trying to condescend, I will say I really think that the actual math of different infinity sets favors my interpretation. If you're at all interested in looking into it further, one of the first non-required math books I read after college goes into some abstract and counterintuitive concepts, but uses a lot of visual examples and keeps it at an explain-this-like-I'm-a-five-year-old level of straightforwardness. There are several chapters on different kinds of infinity. It's been around a few years ... I'll see if I can find it somewhere online for free.