Read 1,227 QI Facts to Blow Your Socks Off Online
Authors: John Lloyd,John Mitchinson
The word pencil
comes from a Latin word meaning
‘small penis’.
When trying out a new pen,
97% of people
write their own name.
90% of everything
written in English
uses just 1,000 words.
20% of all road accidents
in Sweden
involve an elk.
12% of all the Coca-Cola
in America
is drunk at breakfast.
Gongoozler
n.
One who stares for a long time
at things happening on a canal.
Gossypiboma
n.
A surgical sponge
accidentally left inside
a patient’s body.
Jentacular
adj.
Breakfasty; breakfastish;
of, or relating to, breakfast.
Meupareunia
n.
Sexual activity enjoyed
by only one of the participants.
Gorillas
can be put on the pill.
The German for ‘contraceptive’ is
Schwangerschaftsverhütungsmittel
.
By the time you’ve finished saying it,
it’s too late.
On 20th August 1949,
time appeared to stand still
for several minutes,
when hundreds of starlings roosted
on the long hand
of Big Ben.
The correct adjective
to describe a thrush is
turdoid.
If a silkworm
is exposed to pure carbon dioxide,
it crawls around aimlessly,
apparently trying to remember
what it’s supposed to be doing.
Eskimos use refrigerators
to stop their food from freezing.
The Sun’s core is so hot that
a piece of it the size of a pinhead
would give off enough heat
to kill a person 160 kilometres away.
Every living thing can be anaesthetised,
even plants. Despite their successful use
since the mid-19th century,
no one really understands
how anaesthetics work.
A trained typist’s fingers
cover about 16 miles a day.
Every US president with a beard
has been Republican.
The Bible
is the most shoplifted book
in the USA.
The world’s biggest frog
is bigger than
the world’s smallest antelope.
The dik-dik is a miniature antelope
that can go for months
without water
but dies after a week
without salt.
One third of all the salt produced in the US
is used to melt ice on roads.
British geologists have discovered
more of the world’s oil
than the geologists
of all the other nations
put together.
After being annexed
by the British Empire,
the sarong-clad Burmese
referred to their new overlords as
‘The Trouser People’.
Towards the end of each afternoon,
Sir Philip Sassoon (1888–1939)
hauled down the Union Jack
that flew over his house
in case the colours
clashed with
the sunset.
Half of Napoleon’s army
at the battle of Eylau – 30,000 men –
were burglars.
The penalty for adultery in ancient Greece
involved hammering a radish
into the adulterer’s bottom with a mallet.
Radishes were a lot longer
and pointier in those days.
An octopus can ooze through an opening
no bigger than its own eyeball.
Humans and elephants
are the only animals
with chins.
Sir Charles Isham,
a vegetarian spiritualist,
introduced garden gnomes
to England in 1847.
He hoped that they would attract
real gnomes to his garden.
Until the late 15th century,
the word ‘girl’ just meant a child.
Boys were referred to as ‘knave girls’
and female children were ‘gay girls’.
The use of the English word ‘gay’
to mean homosexual
is older than the use of the term
‘homosexual’ to mean gay.
The Serpentine in London was the first
man-made pond in the world
designed to look
as if it wasn’t
man-made.
Albanian has 27 words
for different kinds of moustache
and 30 for eyebrows.
In the 9th century,
Ireland was called ‘Scotia’ and
Scotland was known as ‘Albania’.
Six ten-billionths of the Sun is gold.
If the 1,200,000,000,000,000 tonnes of it
could be extracted,
there would be enough to gild Scotland
to the depth of half a mile.
Beavers have transparent eyelids so they
can see underwater with their eyes shut.
The Old Testament book of
Leviticus
forbids the eating of cuckoos, ferrets,
camels, swans, crabs, frogs, chameleons,
eels, hares, snails, lizards, moles, ravens,
ospreys, vultures, lobsters, owls, storks,
herons, bats, ravens, pelicans, lapwings,
prawns and eagles.
1,000 baby eagles were eaten at
the Archbishop of York’s
enthronement feast in 1466.
Zeppo Marx, the youngest of the
Marx Brothers, designed the clamping
device that held the atom bombs in place
before they were dropped on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Oprah is ‘Harpo’ backwards.
Oprah Winfrey’s real name is Orpah
(after the sister of Ruth in the Bible)
but no one could say or spell it properly
so she eventually gave up
correcting them.
The flowers of the coffee bush
smell like jasmine.
Jasmine is a member of the olive family.
Marie is a member of the Osmond family.
Her first name is Olive.
In 1987, American Airlines saved $40,000
by removing an olive
from each salad
in First Class.
In an average year in Britain,
trousers cause
twice as many accidents
as chainsaws.
100,000 mobile phones
are dropped down the loo
in Britain every year,
and 50,000
get run over.
People are 1% shorter
in the evening
than they are
in the morning.
The Metropolitan Police
employs 39% more people
than the Royal Navy.
Cranberries bounce when ripe:
another name for them is ‘bounceberries’.
One that bounces seven times
is in perfect condition to eat.
Horripilation
is another word
for getting goosebumps.
The technical word
for a French kiss is
cataglottism
.
Cockshut
is another word for twilight –
the time of day when chickens
are put to bed.
If all the time our eyes
are shut when blinking
is added together,
we spend 1.2 years
of our waking lives
in pitch darkness.
Every time a woodpecker’s beak
hits a tree, its head is subject to
1,000 times the force of gravity.
The smallest trees in the world
are the dwarf willows of Greenland.
They are two inches tall.
The world’s smallest test tube
has a diameter
10,000 times narrower
than a human hair.
Antarctic islands include
Disappointment Island, Fabulous Island,
Desolation Island, Monumental Island,
Inexpressible Island, Pourquoi Pas Island,
Shag Island, Circumcision Island and
Shoe Island.
In 2008, Usain Bolt
set the world record for the 100 metres
with one shoelace undone.
Every electron in the universe
knows about the state of
every other electron.
Honeybees
always know where the Sun is,
even if it’s
on the other side of the world.
The national anthem of Bangladesh
includes the lines:
‘The fragrance from your mango groves
Makes me wild with joy.’
One in three men in Britain
of Bangladeshi origin
works as a waiter.
Towels are a central part
of the culture in Belarus,
even appearing on the country’s flag.
At a traditional Belarusian wedding,
the bride walks to the church
dragging a towel.
13% of Belarus
is swamp.
In 2011, a 61-year-old woman
gave birth to her own grandson.
The baby was conceived with an egg
donated by her 35-year-old daughter.
The American Psychiatric Association
listed homosexuality
as a mental illness
until 1973.
Sudan is the only country
that still has crucifixion
as an official form
of capital punishment.
By the age of 18,
the average American child
will have seen 200,000
murders on television.
In German,
a
Turnbeutelvergesser
is a boy who’s too weedy
for school sport and ‘forgets’
to bring his gym bag.
Schattenparker
is German for someone
who parks his car in the shade.
Depp
means ‘twit’
in German.
Thud!
the Discworld novel by Terry Pratchett,
is published in Germany as
Klonk!
The Basque word
for ‘cold’ is
hotz
.
The Russian word
for ‘sock’ is pronounced
‘no sock’.
If you say the letters S.O.C.K.S
aloud in English, you will find yourself
pronouncing the Spanish for
‘it is what it is’
almost perfectly.
If you forget the tilde (~)
over an N when asking
how old someone is in Spanish,
you will end up asking them
how many anuses they have.
When Montenegro became
independent from Yugoslavia,
its Internet domain name went from being
.yu to .me
The Irish word
leis
(pronounced ‘lesh’)
has four different meanings.
Bhí leis leis leis leis
means
‘His thigh was naked also’.
A
bourdaloue
was a gravy-boat-like
receptacle that ladies would squeeze
between their thighs
if they needed to urinate at court
in Georgian England.
George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and
Donald Rumsfeld
all have slime-mold beetles
named after them.
Since 1700, new beetle species
have been discovered
at the rate of
one every six hours.
The short-circuit beetle is so named
because it eats the lead covering
of telephone cables.
Cartwrightia cartwrighti
is a scarab beetle
described by Oscar L. Cartwright.
As you are not supposed to name
a species after yourself,
he claimed to have named it
after his brother.
Deathwatch beetles
attract mates
by repeatedly banging
their heads on the floor.
During his first teaching job in 1925,
Evelyn Waugh set out
to drown himself at sea,
but turned back
after being stung by a jellyfish.
The Irish name for jellyfish is
smugairle róin,
which literally translates as
‘seal’s snot’.
The French
for a walkie-talkie is
un talkie walkie.
The Eiffel Tower
has the same nickname
as Margaret Thatcher.
It’s known as
La Dame de Fer
(‘The Iron Lady’).
Crime, disease and average
walking speed increase by 15%
as a city doubles in size.
People all over the world
are walking 10% faster
than they did a decade ago.
Airlines all over the world are flying
10% slower than they did in 1960
(to save on fuel costs).
As an apple falls to Earth,
the Earth falls very, very slightly
towards the apple.
Isaac Newton served as MP for Cambridge
but spoke in the House only once.
He asked for a window to be closed
because it was draughty.
Bram Stoker,
the author of
Dracula
,
married Oscar Wilde’s
first girlfriend.
Arthur Ransome,
author of
Swallows and Amazons
,
married Trotsky’s secretary.
Two-thirds of all the poetry
sold in the UK by living poets
is by Seamus Heaney.
The Slavonic name
for God is
Bog.
In 1568, the Catholic Church
condemned the entire population of
the Netherlands to death for heresy.
In the 1930s, the Rev. Frederick Densham
of Warleggan in Cornwall
alienated his flock by painting the church
blue and red, surrounding his rectory
with barbed wire and replacing
the congregation with
cardboard cut-outs.
Stalin had shamans
thrown out of helicopters
to give them a chance to
prove that they could fly.
It is most likely to be raining
at 7 a.m.
and least likely
at 3 a.m.
In Maori,
the word Maori
means ‘normal’.
Princess Anne
was the only woman
not to be gender-tested
at the 1976 Montreal Olympics.
Anne, Duc de Montmorency (1493–1567),
was a French general and politician.
He was named after his mother,
Anne Pot.
Pol Pot,
the Cambodian dictator
responsible for the deaths
of 21% of his country’s people,
was a former
geography teacher.
The Swahili word
for a coconut is
nazi
.
‘Mother-in-law’
is an anagram of
‘Hitler woman’.
Both Stalin and Hans Christian Anderson
were the sons of a cobbler and a
washerwoman.
In 1187, as a symbol of unity
between their two countries,
Richard I of England
spent a night in the same bed
as Philip II of France.
In 1381, Richard II made Chelmsford
the capital of England
for one week.
In 1517, Richard Foxe,
the blind bishop of Winchester,
founded Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
On his first visit to the new college,
he was led twice round the main quad
to make it seem bigger than it really was.
In 1953, Keith Richards’ musical career
began as a choirboy
singing at the Queen’s coronation.
No male jaguar
has ever successfully mated
with a female tiger:
if it were to happen, the resulting animal
would be known as
a ‘jagger’.
Early draft names for
Walt Disney’s seven dwarfs included
Flabby, Dirty, Shifty,
Lazy, Burpy, Baldy
and Biggo-Ego.
Strictly speaking,
the plural of dwarf
is dwarrows.
In 2011, Toyota announced that
the official plural of Prius was
Prii.
Research using rabbits
has led to 26 Nobel Prizes
for Physiology or Medicine.
To process their food
with maximum efficiency,
rabbits swallow up to
80% of their own faeces.
The Sumatran rabbit
is so rare and shy
that the nearest humans
have no word for it in their language.
Bugs Bunny
is not a rabbit
but a hare.
The sloth is the only animal
named after one of the Seven Deadly Sins.
During the rainy season,
its metabolism slows down so much
that it can starve to death
on a full stomach.
Dolphins shed
the top layer of their skin
every two hours.
Paper can only be recycled six times.
After that, the fibres
are too weak to hold together.
A 2011 study by Nobel Economics laureate
Daniel Kahneman of 25 top Wall Street
traders found that they were
no more consistently successful
than a chimpanzee tossing a coin.
A 2011 study in the journal
Psychology
,
Crime and Law
tested 39 British senior
managers and CEOs and found that they
had more psychopathic tendencies
than patients in Broadmoor.
Since 1980, the salaries of executives in
FTSE 100 companies have risen by 4,000%
compared to 300% for their employees.
An average pay rise of 50% in 2010
took the annual earnings of the directors
of Britain’s FTSE 100 companies
to £2.7 million each: over 100 times
the national average.
At the end of 2011,
the FTSE index stood at 5572:
1358 points lower
than it was at the end of 1999.
Google
was originally called
Back-Rub.
The
acnestis
is the part of the back
that is impossible to scratch.
The most common treatment
for angina is
nitroglycerin.
It comes in pills, sprays or patches.
All Bran
is only
87% bran.