2006 pts ยท June 10, 2012
I like hats.
You need chaff, not flares! Even so, though, it's hard to throw a missile off course from a massive jetliner.
It's pizzas all the way down the call stack.
Shinier cities with more shiny graphics means you can't support as many entities.
The chemical, which was a gas producer, was removed a month ago. Please don't talk about something that isn't there and wasn't harmful.
Being able to see the contrast between "clean" and "unclean" also helps, I would imagine.
Freshman chemistry major! I can put things in Erlenmeyer flasks and then laugh maniacally.
Er, as a chemist, I'd like to shoot down the notion of "obviously safe ingredients." ANYTHING can be dangerous.
Well, it's easy! Get yourself some baking soda and vinegar...
As another Texan, I disagree. It's more like 125%.
The full title: "MRW I wear my batman costume to masturbate in front of my neighbors sprinkler at 3:32am every third Tuesday of the month."
http://imgur.com/Gi9cwgR , I think
That burn was sicker than 6 molar NaOH.
Well then you just have your buddy throw a sandwich at you and it's all good
Being briefly enveloped in flames won't necessarily set you on fire- it all depends on how long it lasts.
That sounds about right. I took the stuff for quite a while due to massive acne on my shoulders. It's not -awful-, at least.
aroound is a word!
Working in an empty lab is dangerous, though- it's a nice environment but there's no one aroound to help you if you injure yourself.
I am replying to a comment. I desire to gain internet points by engaging in witty discourse. I am a commenter.
I miss Firefly.
So THIS is what the front page feels like.
Well played, OP.
Milk and cream contain large amounts of oxidane, which is dangerous to human life in many ways. Beware!
The third reaction is so slow that it only happens if the second, far faster one has stopped working. This causes a dramatic change. (4/4)
then the first reaction's product undergoes a third, slow reaction (triiodide forms a purple complex with starch, for example) (3/4)
chemical (triiodide, for example). A second reaction rapidly consumes it. The second reaction is eventually exhausted, though, and (2/?)
The exact chemistry can vary (you can do this reaction several ways), but they all work the same way. One reaction slowly produces a (1/?)
Chemistry major here- can confirm. The pouring is just to show that the video isn't being sped up or jumped ahead.
I've had a fair number of those questions. They're offputting at first, but with a bit of thought, they're not so bad as people say.
Isn't the point of college to have good educators educating you? You don't pay for the cafeteria food alone!
You need chaff, not flares! Even so, though, it's hard to throw a missile off course from a massive jetliner.
It's pizzas all the way down the call stack.
Shinier cities with more shiny graphics means you can't support as many entities.
The chemical, which was a gas producer, was removed a month ago. Please don't talk about something that isn't there and wasn't harmful.
Being able to see the contrast between "clean" and "unclean" also helps, I would imagine.
Freshman chemistry major! I can put things in Erlenmeyer flasks and then laugh maniacally.
Er, as a chemist, I'd like to shoot down the notion of "obviously safe ingredients." ANYTHING can be dangerous.
Well, it's easy! Get yourself some baking soda and vinegar...
As another Texan, I disagree. It's more like 125%.
The full title: "MRW I wear my batman costume to masturbate in front of my neighbors sprinkler at 3:32am every third Tuesday of the month."
http://imgur.com/Gi9cwgR , I think
That burn was sicker than 6 molar NaOH.
Well then you just have your buddy throw a sandwich at you and it's all good
Being briefly enveloped in flames won't necessarily set you on fire- it all depends on how long it lasts.
That sounds about right. I took the stuff for quite a while due to massive acne on my shoulders. It's not -awful-, at least.
aroound is a word!
Working in an empty lab is dangerous, though- it's a nice environment but there's no one aroound to help you if you injure yourself.
I am replying to a comment. I desire to gain internet points by engaging in witty discourse. I am a commenter.
I miss Firefly.
So THIS is what the front page feels like.
Well played, OP.
Milk and cream contain large amounts of oxidane, which is dangerous to human life in many ways. Beware!
The third reaction is so slow that it only happens if the second, far faster one has stopped working. This causes a dramatic change. (4/4)
then the first reaction's product undergoes a third, slow reaction (triiodide forms a purple complex with starch, for example) (3/4)
chemical (triiodide, for example). A second reaction rapidly consumes it. The second reaction is eventually exhausted, though, and (2/?)
The exact chemistry can vary (you can do this reaction several ways), but they all work the same way. One reaction slowly produces a (1/?)
Chemistry major here- can confirm. The pouring is just to show that the video isn't being sped up or jumped ahead.
I've had a fair number of those questions. They're offputting at first, but with a bit of thought, they're not so bad as people say.
Isn't the point of college to have good educators educating you? You don't pay for the cafeteria food alone!