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William Hyde Wollaston discovered palladium in 1803. Wollaston, a physicist and chemist, was born in East Dereham, Norfolk, England on August 6, 1766.

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Q: When did William Hyde Wallostan discover palladium?
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Who is Maths Worldwide?

I wish to raise this topic of Rob and Kim Hyde and their experience they stated publicly on Channel Nine's A Current Affair. Now they are caring loving parents, and for them to even THINK about going on television just demonstrates to you how far/extreme the ethical conduct of Mathemagic (now known as Maths Worldwide) has gone. And the thing is, they just DONT learn from their lesson. As you already know, Mathemagic bankrupt under the hands of the very professionally inept hands of Gary Rosenberg. His name is already disgraced as it was featured in a major newspaper publication: he's a nobody, he should be shunned in our society, and that's what bankrupt law is meant to do. Now as to this new respawning of Mathemagic as Maths Worldwide, they are completely and utterly ridiculous under the Trade Practices Act. Not only do they not act in good faith, but in no way could you even suggest that such a firm which has had this PAST< should you EVER consider buying from again. Now I read another person analogizing the conduct of Maths Worldwide to that of child pedophiles. Now so not to be defamatory, I'm going to analyze this matter in good faith. Being a pedophile means you have a sexual perversion in which children are the preferred sexual object. Obviously, there is no statement of fact that Maths Worldwide personell have sexually molested little children (and I don't make that inference). But I understand the analogy to financial abuse. Abuse comes in many ways, verbal abuse, really, any sort of abuse towards kids isn't okay. Financially targetting little children, is just SICK, and it should be jailable in our society. I don't care what your view is in life, you have got to have mental problems to do something like that, serious psychological issues. You need to go to see a psychiatrist if you do something like that. It is a failure of our market to address it otherwise.


Where does picnics come from?

[French pique-nique, probably reduplication of piquer, to pick] There is no reliable etymology for the word picnic, with the original use of the word lagging about three hundred years behind the first descriptions of alfresco (open air) dining. From about 1340 until the very early 1800s, there are three contextual descriptions of picnics, whether or not the word is actually used: a pleasure party at which a meal was eaten outdoors; a hunt assembly; and an indoor social gathering or dinner party. An outdoor meal in a garden is described in Italian literature by Giovanni Boccaccio in a poem that dates from about 1340. Sixty years later a similar event occurs in one of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. It seems certain that the assemblée, or meal served during the hunt that is described and illustrated in the hunt manual of Jacques du Fouilloux's La Vénerie (Hunting) (1560) and George Turberville's The Noble Arte of Venerie (1575), are picnics in all but name. By 1692, the concept of the alfresco meal shifted, and when cited in Gilles Ménage's Dictionnaire du Etymologique de la Langue Françoise (Etymological dictionary of the French language) piquenique is assumed to be of unknown origin, but means un repas où chacun paye son écot (a meal where each pays his share). By 1750, Ménage's editors suggest that piquenique may be of Spanish origin and that it appeared in 1664 in a French translation of works by Francisco Quevedo. Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of Great Britain, had a dinner served on the grounds of Hyde Park in 1654. Samuel Pepys, the English diarist, ate many meals while boating on the Thames or sitting on its banks. These are picnics in all but name, but they are only recorded as a dinner alfresco. The Oxford English Dictionary says that the word "picnic" originally referred to fashionable social entertainment in which each person contributed a share of the provisions, and says that the first recorded use of "picnic" in English appears in 1748 in a letter from Lord Chesterfield to his son, in the sense of an assembly or social gathering. It seems that the word was used in this sense widely in Germany, as Chesterfield's son was in Berlin at the time. A subsequent mention occurs in a letter from Lady M. Coke to Lady Stafford in 1763 from Hanover. Gustaf Palmfelt, a Swede, in a 1738 translation into Swedish used "picnick" (in the sense of an assembly); Swedish continues to use "picnick" and suggests that it is of French or English origin. Larousse Gastronomique (2002) states that 'picnic' is a contraction of pique (to pick), piquante (sharp or pungent), and nique (of small value). This suggestion seems commonsensical, but it is guesswork based on the technique of word formation by clipping words together to form a new word. In the arts and literature, picnics tend to be more concerned with place, action, and figurative meanings and less concerned with food, if it is mentioned at all. Oliver Goldsmith, whom Georgina Battiscombe (English Picnics, 1949) credits with describing the first picnic in English literature in The Vicar of Wakefield (1766) provides these bare bones: "Our family dined in the field, and we sat, or rather, reclined round a temperate repast, our cloth spread upon the hay." Battiscombe insists that a picnic must be a meal eaten outdoors to which diners bring something to eat, even if there is no sharing. She suggests that before the Romantics made nature fashionable "no one connected the idea of pleasure with the notion of a meal eaten anywhere but under a roof" (p. 4). In London, the so-called Picnic Society (1802) was a short-lived elite social club organized for entertainment. But a decade later "picnic" is used only in the sense of a meal eaten outdoors. Occasionally, it was used in the sense of an anthology, as in Charles Dickens's The Pic-Nic Papers, by Various Hands (1841), or as a term of disapprobation as in a person accused of picnickery and nicknackery, or being frivolous. Germans use picnick in the sense of holding a meeting, as in the phrase ein Picknick halten. The verb is picknicken, which literally means holding a picnic as you would hold a meeting or a party. Italians use scampagnata (holiday in the country), or lolazione sull'erba (luncheon on the grass). Spaniards use comida al aire libre (luncheon on the grass), or comida campestre (eat in the country). Spanish dictionaries seem unaware that Ménage thinks the word may be of Spanish origin. Koreans use both the Chinese so pong (a little meal in the country) and "picnic." Their favorite picnic time occurs when the cherry trees are in bloom. The Japanese have a long history of depicting meals taken outdoors, often celebrating hanami, the cherry blossom season, or another seasonal event. In 1862, "picnic" was translated as shokuji (meal), and in the twentieth century, the Japanese adopted the loanword pikunikku.


Related questions

Who discovered Palladium?

William Hyde Wallostan


Where was Palladium discovered?

Palladium was discovered in London, England by English chemist William Hyde Wollaston in 1803.


How discovered palladium?

A man that goes by the name William Hyde Wallaston discovered palladium in 1803 accidentally by analyzing samples of platinum ore.


How was palladium discovered?

A man that goes by the name William Hyde Wallaston discovered palladium in 1803 accidentally by analyzing samples of platinum ore.


Is palladium a metal non metal?

Palladium, symbol Pd, atomic number 46, is a metal. It was discovered in 1803 by William Hyde Wollaston, and named after the asteroid Pallas.


How did palladium get its name?

Palladium is named after the asteroid Pallas, which was discovered in 1802. The element palladium was also discovered around the same time, in 1803, and was named in honor of the recently discovered asteroid.


When did William Hyde - Douai - die?

William Hyde - Douai - died in 1651.


When was William Hyde - Douai - born?

William Hyde - Douai - was born in 1597.


What is William Hyde Wollaston's birthday?

William Hyde Wollaston was born on August 6, 1766.


When was William Hyde Wollaston born?

William Hyde Wollaston was born on August 6, 1766.


When was William Hyde Rice born?

William Hyde Rice was born on 1846-07-23.


When was William DeWitt Hyde born?

William DeWitt Hyde was born on 1858-09-23.