What's the most obscure thing you know?

Could you identify the NCC-2010-C for me, perhaps? I friend stumped me with that one a while back. It’s almost certainly not a “canon” ship, as the registry number is too close to the Excelsior’s, and as the writers really don’t like to use the “letter” additions to the registry numbers to denote a ship having a predecesor with the same name. (They even found an excuse to “write off” the Yamato being called the NCC-1050-E once by Riker. And he said it ON AIR. Don’t ask me why.)

Oh, and another quiz…the U.S.S. Ajax was of what class, and what did it have in common with the Imperial Star Destroyer from Star Wars? :slight_smile:
Ranchoth

The only station on the London Underground that doesn’t have any letters from the word “mackerel” in it is “St Johns Wood”

The names of any two consecutive integers have at least one letter in common.

“Britney Spears” is an anagram of “Presbyterians”.

Um…I don’t think that’s true. (and yes, I know that you’re not supposed to pick them up by the tail anymore).

Sorry, I can’t help you with non-canon ships; I should have specified that when I made my boast.

The U.S.S. Ajax is an Apollo class starship. The Star Wars[sub]ick, yuck, ptoooie![/sub] connection has me stumped, however.

The safest mode of transportation, based on passenger miles, is the elevator.

Keith Moon’s favorite drink was Brandy and Ginger Ale, and it’s yummy too!

I actually knew that, sad to say.

Have I mentioned that the Catholic Church considers the capybara to be a fish?

Well, I got it from Alan R. Warwick’s rather enjoyable book The Phoenix Suburb: A South London Social History on the history of the Norwood area and the Crystal Palace:

Alas, Warwick does not include footnotes, and I don’t know from which of the umpteen sources in the bibliography he took this tidbit. And since he’s been dead since 1973, I can’t ask him.

The Cattleya, known as the moth or corsage orchid does not retain it’s odor when the bloom is cut.

I can sing “Jesus loves me” in Navajo.

i was bored for a good week in math and i wrote down every song i knew off by heart lyrics wise
came up to…i think 246 or near 300

The builder of the Tower of London was named Gundulf the Weeper.

38 years ago I learned the Pledge of Alligence in Latin - to this day I can still say it…

Origami is the art of paper-folding, but if you’re also allowed to slit or cut the paper, it’s called Kirigami.

In all the songs ever recorded by The Police, only one features a guitar solo.

The only jail cell Harry Houdini attempted to escape from and couldn’t was Preston jail, in Lancashire, north-West England, and he failed because the police guys had forgotten to lock it.

NICAM stands for Near Instaneous Compounded Audio Matrix.

VHS originally stood for Vertical Helical Scanning, although these days they say it just stands for ‘very high standard’ or something bland like that.

Roget’s Thesaurus does not contain the word ‘thesaurus’ or the word ‘gullible’.

French speakers use twice as many syllables per sentence as English speakers.

The Serbian for “How are you?” is “Kako ste?”.

The original Volkswagen Beatles didn’t have gas gauges.

I know that male marsupials have forked penises.

Yes, but the parts, er, come togehter when er, functioning in the reproductive sense.
Didelphis virginiana does not, er, do something that requires the female to “blow vigorously into her pouch.”
I am suitably embarassed. I shall play opossum.

In China, chinese food is simply called “food”.

I’m no mathmatician but wouldn’t this be true for any real number raised to the 4th power? Not just a Non Negative??

for example - 3 (to the 4th power)

-3 *-3 *-3 *-3 = 81

Please explain or am I way off here?

I think that there is a fine distinciton. Roosevelt was the youngest President (took office after an assasination ) while Kennedy is the youngest ELECTED President

Not true. It may be called “vegetables”, “rice”, "noodles’ ect. instead of “Chinese vegetables.” Chinese food is often referred to by native Chinese speakers as “zhongcai” or “Chinese food” (literally Chinese vegetables). Food is called “shipin” and can be Western or Chinese.