Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for May 29, 2014

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    spaced man spliff  over 10 years ago

    I’d ask the child:-Where’s your ear?-Where’s your other ear?-Where’s your eye?-Where’s your other eye?-Where’s your nose?-Where’s your other nose?—And that’d stop ’em in their tracks.-But Guess What? There IS such a thing as an “other nose”

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    Templo S.U.D.  over 10 years ago

    So, the pup has four nostrils?

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    SMMAssociates  over 10 years ago

    It’s important to remember that “Penates” is a plural noun here – not the name of any particular diety.

    The “mainline” Gods, like Jupiter, received “mainstream” recognition and worship, but the average citizen who wasn’t part of some cult or other, felt that his Lares and Penates were far more important. (The Lares – again, a plural noun, and not the name of a particular diety – were apparently guardians of the hearth.)

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    Aussie Down Under  over 10 years ago

    I know it’s an old one but…..the dog doesn’t have a nose? How does it smell? Terrible.

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    John W Kennedy Premium Member over 10 years ago

    The Penates, however, did have a special connection with storerooms and cupboards. It’s important to remember that, contrary to what you were taught in junior high school, the real Greek and Roman religions were very different. Romans lived in a world of vague little gods fluttering around them like the birds flying aroud Disney’s Snow White. Greeks had gods like that, too, such as fauns and naiads, but they were generally outdoors and in the country, and had as little as possible to do with humans, while the Roman little gods were in the city, and in charge of almost anything. They had a god of doorsteps. If there were Romans today, they’d have a god of TV remotes and a god of eggbeaters. When the Romans met the Greeks, they loved all the cool mythology—Roman gods never had any adventures, they were just sort of there—and decided that the Greek gods were other names for some of the more important Roman gods. (They were actually partly right; the two religions show clear signs of descending from the same stone-age ancestor.) There were some serious mismatches, though. The horrible Kronos, who ate his children, was identified with the King-of-the-Golden-Age Saturn, and Apollo, who was basically the Greek god of grooviness (not the Sun god—that was a later mix-up), had no Roman parallel at all, so he had to be copied as he was. The Romans later also identified the German gods with their own. Tiw was Mars, Odin was Mercury, Thor was Jupiter, and Freya was Venus. (They couldn’t find a German version of Saturn, though.)

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    RCKJD  over 10 years ago

    The “Double Nose” of the Pachon Navarro is simply a nose that is separated into to distinct "units. Each has one nostril and works just as any other dogs nose.

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    fixer1967  over 10 years ago

    AD-36? I eat like a bird and I am still over weight (285 pounds). I wonder about this AD-36. I need to do some research.

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    John W Kennedy Premium Member over 10 years ago

    It’s a general trend in traditional paganism. Sometimes it even turns into an echo chamber. Woden, the Anglo-Saxon version of Norse Odin or German Wotan, got back to the mainland, and was accepted there as a new god.

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