It is part of the Paris-Roubaix cycling race over 257 km, from Paris to Roubaix, near the Belgium border. Of this distance, nearly 53 km is over cobblestones, which is the most dangerous part. It is an annual race that started in 1896 and is one of the oldest. It is also called the ‘Hell of the North’. The winner …
Read More »What is a cloud burst?
A cloud burst is a form of torrential rainfall accompanied by hail and thunder. It is usually observed in high altitude areas and occurs due to the formation of a low pressure area on the top of a mountain. The low pressure zone attracts clouds to the top of the mountain with great force. When they hit the peak, the …
Read More »What is a caterpillar’s first meal?
For many species of caterpillar, the first meal is their own egg shell. It is thought that the shell contains vital food substances.
Read More »What is a carrotmob?
A carrotmob is an event where environmentalists queue up to buy goods from a shop which goes green. This is a sort of incentive for their intentions. The concept uses the carrot and stick method, hence ‘carrot mob’. Environmentalists mob a ‘green’ store for mass purchases as a reward. This is planned in advance and executed as an event.
Read More »What is a Camel’s hump for?
A camel uses its hump as a portable storehouse of fat from which to draw nourishment when food is scarce. A chemical process enables the camel to covert some of this fat into water, an advantage which enables it to survive for up to 17 days in the desert without drinking. The Arabian camel or dromedary, found in Arab countries …
Read More »What is a busman’s holiday?
The phrase Busman’s Holiday means to do the same thing on one’s day off as one does all week. The accepted origin of the phrase traces it to drivers of London’s horse-drawn omnibuses in the 19th century, who would supposedly spend their days off checking up on how the substitute drivers were treating their horses. In a nutshell, it refers …
Read More »What is a Bolero?
It’s a Spanish dance and song in moderate tempo and triple metre that was popular at the end of the 18th and throughout the 19th century. Its rhythms are closely related to the polonaise, a Polish slow dance. The Cuban Bolero, which superseded the Spanish version in Latin America, is in double time. Beethoven wrote the ‘Bolero a solo WoO …
Read More »What is a blizzaster?
A combination of the words blizzard and disaster, blizzaster is a massive snow storm or the negative impact of such a storm. It means the same as a snownami, snowpocalypse or snomageddon – anything used to describe a severe snow storm.
Read More »What is a Black Corner Notice?
A Black Corner Notice is one of the seven major types of notices issued by Interpol to its member countries to share information related to criminal investigation. Six of these are known by the colour in which the Interpol logo is printed, different colours denoting notices carrying different types of information. The Black Corner Notice contains information related to unidentified …
Read More »What is a black blizzard?
During the drought of the 1930s in America, with no natural anchors in place, the soil dried, turned to dust and blew eastward and southward in large dark clouds. They blackened the sky and reached all the way to East Coast cities such as New York and Washington DC. Much of the soil ended up as deposits in the Atlantic …
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