Who invented 98.6° and when?

As we have seen from what Cecil himself said, your professors were probably wrong. :rolleyes:

One of my college textbooks claimed that 100 F was the rectal temperature of a cow. :rolleyes:

Or, gasp, Cecil and the professor were both wrong.

Yes, but which cow?

Over 11,000 posts on this board, and you haven’t yet figured out that Cecil is never wrong? :stuck_out_tongue:

After posting that I pulled the covers over my head.

Presumably, no one is now standing within say, oh, 100 meters of you, for when the lightning strikes. :wink:

According to my art teacher circa 1976, there was an American pop song referring to 98.6. American audiences recognized it as “normal, no fever body temp.” British audiences didn’t, since their body temperature was somewhat lower.

This story is the very definition of “FOAF” and “anecdotal”; I can’t cite a factual source for a single element of it, even the name of the song/musician.

Krokodil, see post #4 above, or this

And #17.

That would explain why Americans find Brits rather chilly.

I think that’s a myth arising from the fact that most Americans only meet Brits through books that portray them as reserved. I found the Brits I encountered to be quite friendly.

I even had a guy in London walk several blocks with me to make sure I could find the place to which he had directed me. “I’ll just walk along with you Yahink. It’s a bit of a maze.”

That one. Over there. See? The one giving milk to the Capybearas. I have it on good authority. (No cite.) :wink: