RedDiablo said:
Q: Why is Helium a king?
A: Because it is a noble gas!
crimson5pheonix said:
RedDiablo said:
Q: Why is Helium a king?
A: Because it is a noble gas!
What about Neon? It's a noble gas as well!
nimrandir said:
Maybe neon is an earl. By the way, Marquis Krypton wants nothing to do with any of this.
crimson5pheonix said:
nimrandir said:
Maybe neon is an earl. By the way, Marquis Krypton wants nothing to do with any of this.
Then what's Argon?
nimrandir said:
It is a little less than one percent of the Earth's atmosphere -- and a viscount.
crimson5pheonix said:
nimrandir said:
It is a little less than one percent of the Earth's atmosphere -- and a viscount.
And Argon?
Edit: sorry, I'm retarded I meant Xenon.
nimrandir said:
crimson5pheonix said:
nimrandir said:
It is a little less than one percent of the Earth's atmosphere -- and a viscount.
And Argon?
Edit: sorry, I'm retarded I meant Xenon.
The throne regrets to announce that Baron Xenon was stripped of his title and lands following the exposure of his dalliance with a sextet of halogen maidservants.
Dear lord, what have I started! Well anyways, here is another joke.
The following is a true story about an anatomist.
One day after sleeping badly, an anatomist went to his frog laboratory and removed from a cage one frog with white spots on its back. He placed it on a table and drew a line just in front of the frog. "Jump frog, jump!" he shouted. The little critter jumped two feet forward. In his lab book, the anatomist scribbled, "Frog with four legs jumps two feet."
Then, he surgically removed one leg of the frog and repeated the experiment. "Jump, jump!" To which, the frog leaped forward 1.5 feet. He wrote down, "Frog with three legs jumps 1.5 feet."
Next, he removed a second leg. "Jump frog, jump!" The frog managed to jump a foot. He scribbled in his lab book, "Frog with two legs jumps one foot."
Not stopping there, the anatomist removed yet another leg. "Jump, jump!" The poor frog somehow managed to move 0.5 feet forward. The scientist wrote, "Frog with one leg jumps 0.5 feet."
Finally, he eliminated the last leg. "Jump, jump!" he shouted, encouraging forward progress for the frog. But despite all its efforts, the frog could not budge. "Jump frog, jump!" he cried again. It was no use; the frog would not response. The anatomist thought for a while and then wrote in his lab book, "Frog with no legs goes deaf."