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Opposite Day is a make believe game usually played by children. Conceptually, Opposite Day is a holiday where things are said and done in an opposite manner. It is not a holiday on any calendar and therefore one can declare that any day of the year is Opposite Day (sometimes retroactively) to indicate something which will be said, or has just been said should be understood opposite to its ...
"The Name Game" (2017) "Dreamgirls and Boys" (2019) ... Solar Opposites: "An Earth Shatteringly Romantic Solar Valentine's Day Opposites Special" (2024)
Owl and Weasel #11: Programme for the first Games Workshop Games Day in 1975. Games Day is a yearly run gaming convention sponsored by Games Workshop. It was started in 1975, after another games convention scheduled for August that year cancelled. Games Workshop decided to fill the resulting gap by running a gaming day of their own.
Sunrise or sunset on a clear day (ambient illumination) 10 4: 10 kilolux: 10–25 kilolux: Typical overcast day, midday 20 kilolux: Shade illuminated by entire clear blue sky, midday 10 5: 100 kilolux 110 kilolux: Bright sunlight 120 kilolux: Brightest sunlight
Mar. 5—Inspired by events in his own English classroom, the writer and teacher Brendan Constantine penned "The Opposites Game." The poem traces an exercise where students identify antonyms for ...
A tea light-type candle, imaged with a luminance camera; false colors indicate luminance levels per the bar on the right (cd/m 2). Luminance is a photometric measure of the luminous intensity per unit area of light travelling in a given direction. [1]
USA Today: "Ejiro Evero's defense enjoyed a brief spike in its pass rush during a three-game stretch in which it recorded 13 sacks, but the unit had just 19 sacks in its other 14 games. While the ...
The term kusogē is a portmanteau of kuso (クソ or 糞, lit. ' crap ') and gēmu (ゲーム, ' game '; a loanword from English).Though it is commonly attributed to illustrator Jun Miura [], and occasionally to Takahashi-Meijin of Hudson Soft, it is unclear when and by whom it was popularized – or whether a single source can be attributed in the first place.