Read 1,227 QI Facts to Blow Your Socks Off Online
Authors: John Lloyd,John Mitchinson
Malo kingi
is a jellyfish
named after Robert King,
an American tourist
who died in Australia
after being stung by one.
The man after whom
Parkinson’s disease is named
was once arrested for plotting
to assassinate George III
with a poisoned dart.
The man after whom
Tourette’s Syndrome is named
was shot in the head
by one of his patients.
Spix’s macaw
is named after
the first man to shoot one.
Until 1857, it was legal for
British husbands to sell their wives.
The going rate was
£
3,000
(
£
23,000 in today’s money).
The most common reaction
from men confronted by
TV Licensing Enforcement Officers is,
‘I thought my wife
was dealing with it.’
King Herod’s first wife
was called Doris.
Thomas Edison
proposed to his second wife
in Morse code.
The first escalator was for fun,
rather than for practical purposes.
It was installed at Coney Island
in New York and ridden by 75,000 people
in its first two weeks.
Attendants bearing brandy and
smelling salts stood at the top of the first
escalator in Harrods, to revive shoppers
who became light-headed on the ride.
At least one person a week in the UK
changes their middle name
to ‘Danger’ by deed poll.
If all the British Empire’s dead of the
First World War were to march
four abreast down Whitehall, it would
take them almost four days and nights
to pass the Cenotaph.
At the age of 19, J. S. Bach
walked 420 miles to see
a performance by the composer
Buxtehude.
To
chork
is to make a noise like feet
walking in waterlogged shoes.
J’ai des rossignols
(‘I’ve got nightingales’)
is French for
unexplained noises
coming from a car.
250,000 birds were killed
by the
Exxon Valdez
oil spill in 1989.
About the same number die
from crashing into window glass
in the US every day.
Only half the passengers and crew
who reached America on the
Mayflower
in November 1621
survived until the following spring.
Two-thirds of the world’s caviar
is eaten aboard
the
QE2
.
There are 35,112 golf courses
in the world,
half of them in the USA.
All the world’s golf courses put together
cover more land area
than the Bahamas.
The land around the Iron Curtain
lay untouched for decades. In 1989,
it was turned into a nature reserve
1,400 kilometres long, but less than
200 metres wide.
Victorian guidebooks advised women
to put pins in their mouths
to avoid being kissed in the dark
when trains went through tunnels.
Beekeeping is illegal under the
New York City Health Code,
because bees are
‘naturally inclined to do harm’.
Herring talk out of their arses,
communicating by firing bubbles from
their backsides that sound like
high-pitched raspberries.
The filament of the first
commercial light bulb,
patented by Thomas Edison in 1880,
was made of bamboo.
The tall chef ’s hat or
toque blanche
traditionally had a hundred pleats
to represent the number of ways
an egg could be cooked.
It was once suggested that
New York should be called Brimaquonx,
combining the names
of all the city’s boroughs –
Brooklyn, Staten Island, Manhattan,
Queens and Bronx –
into one.
Tibet has a smaller GDP than Malta,
but is 4,000 times its size.
Hamesucken
is the crime of assaulting someone
in their own home.
Hapax legomenon
describes a word or phrase
that has only been used once.
Haptodysphoria
is the feeling you get from
running your nails
down a blackboard.
Hydrophobophobia
is the fear of
hydrophobia.
Women buy
85% of the world’s Valentine cards and
96% of all the candles
in America.
Einstein
gave his $32,000 Nobel Prize money to
his first wife, Mileva,
as part of their divorce settlement.
The best-selling work of fiction
of the 15th century was
The Tale of the Two Lovers,
an erotic novel by the man who later
became Pope Pius II.
Tiramisu
means ‘pick me up’
in Italian.
The names of the English rivers
Amber, Avon, Axe, Esk, Exe, Ouse,
Humber, Irwell, Thames and Tyne
all mean ‘river’ or ‘water’
in various ancient languages.
There are no rivers
in Saudi Arabia.
The Onyx River
is the only river in Antarctica.
It flows for just 60 days a year
in high summer.
The river with the largest
discharge volume
in Albania is the Seman.
About 100 miles north of the Seman
is the small town of
Puke.
The gold medals at London 2012
were the largest and heaviest
ever awarded at a Summer Olympics,
but are only 1.34% gold.
In 1979, the Uruguayan footballer
Daniel Allende transferred
from Central Español to Rentistas
for a fee of 550 beefsteaks,
to be paid in instalments
of 25 steaks a week.
In 1937, Gillingham FC
sold one of their players to Aston Villa for
three second-hand turnstiles,
two goalkeepers’ sweaters, three cans of
weed-killer and an old typewriter.
Typewriters used to be known as
‘literary pianos’.
The raw materials needed to make a
desktop computer, including
530 lb of fossil fuels,
50 lb of chemicals and
3,330 lb of water,
weigh two tons:
about the same as a rhinoceros.
Exocet
is French for
‘flying fish’.
Ancient Scandinavians
believed that the Aurora Borealis was
the result of huge shoals of herring
reflecting light into the sky.
The word ‘döner’
in
döner kebab
is Turkish for
‘rotating’.
Woodrow Wilson
kept a flock of sheep
on the White House lawn.
He sold the wool and gave the money
to the Red Cross.
Bill Clinton
was mauled by a sheep
at the age of eight and didn’t learn
to ride a bicycle till he was 22.
Before signing the trade embargo
against Cuba, John F. Kennedy
got his press secretary to buy him
1,000 Cuban cigars.
Ronald Reagan’s pet name for
Nancy Reagan was
‘Mommy Poo Pants’.
After George W. Bush
was re-elected president in 2004,
the number of calls from US citizens
to the Canadian Immigration authorities
jumped from 20,000 to 115,000 a day.
One of the main contributors
to the original
Oxford English Dictionary
cut off his penis in a fit of madness.
The longest palindrome in the
Oxford English Dictionary
is ‘tattarrattat’.
James Joyce used it in
Ulysses:
‘I knew his tattarrattat at the door.’
The longest palindrome written by one
poet about another is W. H. Auden’s:
‘T. Eliot, top bard, notes putrid tang
emanating, is sad. I’d assign it a name:
Gnat dirt upset on drab pot toilet.’
James Joyce
married a woman called Nora Barnacle.
She once said to him,
‘Why don’t you write books
people can read?’
During rehearsals for
Peter Pan
,
J. M. Barrie ordered Brussels sprouts
every day for lunch, but never ate them.
When asked why, he said:
‘I cannot resist ordering them.
The words are so lovely to say.’
Botanists
cannot tell the difference
between broccoli and cauliflower.
Rhubarb
is a vegetable.
Some species of scorpion
survive on one meal
a year.
The Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul
has only 5% of the country’s population
but provides 70% of its fashion models.
The trap-jaw ant
has the fastest bite in the world:
its jaws close 2,300 times faster
than a blink of an eye.
The statue of Winston Churchill
in Parliament Square is electrified
to stop pigeons perching
on its head.
In Bolivia,
the Quechua word for ‘baby’ is
guagua
–
pronounced ‘wah wah’.
A baby echidna
is called
a ‘puggle’.
Baby puffins
are called
‘pufflings’.
Baby hedgehogs
are called
‘hoglets’.
In 19th-century Britain,
‘mock-turtle’ soup was often
made from cow foetuses.
Dogs can smell where electric current
has been and human fingerprints
that are a week old.
Lord Byron’s mail often contained
locks of hair from adoring female fans.
Some of the clippings he sent them
in return actually came from
his pet Newfoundland dog,
Boatswain.
As soon as Lord Byron left England
for the last time in 1816, his creditors
entered his home and repossessed
everything he owned, right down to his
tame squirrel.
In 1899, Dr Horace Emmett
announced that the secret
of eternal youth was injections
of ground-up squirrel testicles.
He died later the same year.
Squirrels
can remember the hiding places
of up to 10,000 nuts.
More than 10,000 seashells
had to be crushed to make
the purple dye to colour
a single Roman toga.
The Latin verb
manicare
means
‘to come in the morning’.
In the novel that the film
Pinocchio
was based on, Jiminy Cricket
was brutally murdered and
Pinocchio had his feet burned off and
was hanged by villagers.
Donald Duck’s
voice started out
as an attempt to do
an impression
of a lamb.
Red Bull
is illegal in Norway, Denmark,
Uruguay and Iceland.
Sitting Bull
was originally called
Jumping Badger.
When Fidel Castro
seized power in Cuba,
he ordered all Monopoly sets
to be destroyed.
The human body grows fastest
during its few first weeks in the womb.
If it were to keep growing
at the same rate for 50 years,
it would be bigger than
Mount Everest.
To produce beef
takes 16,000 times its own weight
in water.
The Turkish for ‘cannibal’
is
yamyam
.
On 30th June 1998, England lost to
Argentina in a World Cup penalty
shoot-out. On that day, and for two days
afterwards, the number of heart attacks
in England increased by 25%.