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4
1.
Hipsie 3 year s ago
#29 Actual name: "taffrail log" Description of its use is correct
       
7
2.
Gus 3 year s ago
#34 scientific name is "window" I believe.
       
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3.
Karen 3 year s ago
#31 Fire Stations have these to drain the water when it's winter, keeps the hoses from freezing up with ice, I'm from Alaska, they have the same, notice where the pic is from. Hey, my Avatar is still a "Karen", Izismile your algorithm is stuck, same as yesterday
       
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4.
Ellie 3 year s ago
Karen,

Nice picture though
       
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5.
Roderick 3 year s ago
Karen,

Karen demanding to speak to a manager. That's something new for the Internet.
       
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6.
Victor 3 year s ago
Had one of these in my old flat's 18 sq feet bathroom!

Forgot the number: #23
       
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7.
Quilla 3 year s ago
#12 is a cheap bottle of Georgian Wine (decorative)
       
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8.
Gene 3 year s ago
#20 if it has metal connectors on both ends and is near a power line overhead, it could be a fuse that burned out in an overload, and the crew dropped it when they put the new one in.
       
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yahooshoot

"Old container made out of clay and coated in brass. It shows a image of church."

A: "It’s a decanter of some sort. One way to find out what’s in it — open it up! If there is liquor inside there it doesn’t get better with age. In my experience these “collectible” decanters aren’t really very valuable. I found that out when I inherited a collectible Jack Daniel’s decanter with a tax stamp on it from 1964. I contacted the Jack Daniels distillery directly and they told me that the decanter itself probably only had a nominal value of $10-20, and the whiskey inside doesn’t age in the bottle or become more valuable. Only wine has the potential to get better with age after it is bottled."

 

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