Stuff that took you too long to realize

In Spanish it means “moment”.

I drive a Yaris hutchback; I own half of another; and when I turn this one in, it will probably be in exchange for another.

Why wouldn’t I want to drive a car with five black holes? (one in each corner, letting you manoeuver in some incredibly tight spots, and one inside, letting you load amazing amounts of stuff).

Just busting ya. I was stuck behind one going up a hill and it barely made it. I think the hamster was exhausted. :stuck_out_tongue:

:smack:

And its twin brother: “Happy wife, happy life.”

I like to tease my wife “If you’re unhappy, I’m unhappy; if necessary you’ll guarantee it”.

Woody Woodpecker’s voice. I never realized that that’s exactly how a woodpecker would sound, if he could talk while he’s pecking wood.

Luckily, living in NJ, I don’t have to worry about this very often. But when getting gas in other states, I wedge the gas cap into the pump handle to keep the gas flowing. This works really well and lets me clean the windshield or sit back in the car while waiting for the tank to fill, or at least just minimize touching the filthy gas pump handle.

When I read the word “misled” I thought it was the past tense of “misle” (pronounced like myzzle) and could never figure out what it meant.

Once I bought a silk chemise for a girlfriend. She said, “Oh, it’s a shimmy!” “What?” “My grandmother had some of these, she said they were her shimmies.”

On parallel parking on the opposite side as traffic flow:

You would think so, wouldn’t you? But there was a whole thread on this not too long ago, starting with facts but then leading to, “How can there be anything wrong with this?”

Good point. Or even 31 years ago, when I started driving.

Something I learned on a thread just like this on this board recently that made me smack my head:

The reason the hook you wind a vacuum cleaner chord around turns 180 degrees is so you can unspool it with just the flick of a wrist…I never ever realized that until someone here pointed it out.

Yeah, and Geddy Lee already told us all about that decades ago. We should have known.

(If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice)

It wasn’t all that long ago that I made the realization that coriander = cilantro and chick peas = garbanzo beans.

Coriander is cilantro?! That changes everything!

I’ve always disliked it, too, for using “left” and “right” for something that’s twisting in a circle: for every part that moves “righty”, there’s a part moving an equal amount “lefty.”

It’s almost as bad as that moronic poem about the months, whose cadence and rhyme works with pretty much any combination: “Thirty days hath December, May, July, and November.” The only way to remember it is to already know the answer you need.

I’ve had my car for seven years - I discovered yesterday that it has a handle on the side of the seat to make it go up and down. I’m sure I must have known that at some point, but it was like learning it for the first time yesterday.

Also, it was only a few years ago that I realized that the sports brand name is “Title-ist,” not “Tit-leist.” :smiley:

:smack:

I was amazed when I realized that screws follow the Right Hand Rule. The steps:
[ol][li]Make a “thumbs up” with your right hand.[/li][li]Point your thumb in the direction you want the screw to go.[/li][li]The direction your fingers curl (from knuckles to fingertips) is the direction you need to turn the screw.[/li][/ol]

In cooking AFAICT, Coriander = seeds, cilantro = leaves.

Same rule applies to current flow in coiled wire - if it’s wrapped clockwise, current goes away - counterclockwise, current coming toward you.

And from the Latin* Felis silvestris catus*, we get both Felix and Sylvester.

I only recently realized that the four grandiose notes that accompany the Warner Brothers logo displayed at the end of some TV shows are the notes for As Time Goes By, from the Warner Brothers movie Casablanca.