False
they were makinking the penneys out of this wired type of copper so it would be bendalbe and stuff so in 1913 they stoped it was changed so it was only made for 1 year so not that many people have it. if u do it will be worth about $1500 because people did not keep them they just figered that it was a penney
That's going to depend on how much you want to give each person. In the coffee business, a standard "cup" is 6 ounces. You can pour 21 of those out of 1 gallon, and have 2 ounces left for yourself. If you want your group really wired, you can serve 8-ounce cups of coffee, but you'll only get 16 of those out of 1 gallon.
If you mean "why do some men have a male foot fetish" then this is a good question, and a surprisingly common phenomenon in straight men! I am a gay guy, and have a foot fetish myself, so I have come across lots of straight men who have massive fetishes for male feet despite being into women! I am no psycologist, but (according to experts) most foot fetishes are said to stem from the experiences/discoveries of an infant, which (when pleasurable or non threatening/comforting) forms a subconcious bond or connection to a specific object/or thing. If you think about it, a fetish starts in much the same way as a phobia which is just as irrational, but associated with fear/discomfort instead of pleasure/comfort. A lot of people will forget the trigger/occasion that began a fetish or phobia during infancy, but the brain will still be "wired up" to respond to the certain object with feelings of love and infatuation, or fear. The foot fetish may come from curiosity of the infants own feet, or another present male (his father, grandad, older brother etc) way before sexuality even really matters to a boy, or indeed, way before an infant boy even comes to realise what sex he is conciously. For this reason I believe that as a boy grows up, the infatuation with feet remains something which, in his mind, is an exception to the stigma's of gender or sexuality depending on how the initial experience played out during that early stage of infancy. This was just my theory, but I hope this kinda helps
Patterns are hidden in plain sight, you just have to know where to look. Things most people see as chaos actually follow subtle laws of behavior. Galaxies, plants, seashells... the patterns never lie, but only some of us can see how the pieces fit together. 7,113,133,252 of us live on this tiny planet. There's an ancient Chinese myth about the red thread of fate. It says that the gods have tied a red thread around every one of our ankles, and attached it to all the people whose lives we are destined to touch. This thread may stretch, or tangle, but it will never break. It's all been predetermined by mathematical probability. To understand the connections, you must understand Human begins are hard wired with the impulses to share our ideas and that numbers are constant until they're not. We can't help but wonder how much difference one person makes in the world. We look inside ourselves, questioning if we have the capacity for heroism and greatness. But the truth is, everytime we take an action, we make an impact. Every single thing we do has an effect on the people around us. Every choice we make sends ripples out into the world. Our smallest acts of kindness can cause a chain reaction of unforeseen benefits for people we've never met. We might not witness those results, but they happen all the same. God has created every system every cycle with mathematics, science and various other elements in which we use in every day life, thus creating a perfect system where anything is possible.
My house is wired using parallel circuits. How did they wire yours?
series circuits have the load wired one after the other parallel circuits have the loads wired on different branches-the advantage being if a bulb breaks, or another component, the others still have current flowing through them
Switches used in electrical circuits are wired in series with either a parallel or series load. In parallel loads, the switch is upstream from the parallel circuit, so that the switch will shut off all of the parallel circuits.
Most homes (probably all homes) are wired in a parallel circuit (actually several parallel circuits and a few dedicated circuits) so that in the event of the failure of one device in the circuit, the rest will continue to function.
Most homes (probably all homes) are wired in a parallel circuit (actually several parallel circuits and a few dedicated circuits) so that in the event of the failure of one device in the circuit, the rest will continue to function.
So you don't have to turn on all the lights at the same time.
A Refrigerator is technically a series because if one wire goes out all of the others go out
Everything in a house is wired in parallel. If you had lights is series when one burns out they would all go out, much like cheap Christmas lights.
Switches in electrical circuits are typically wired in series with the load they control. This means that the switch interrupts the flow of current to the load when turned off, and allows current to pass through when turned on. The switch is connected to the hot (live) wire coming from the power source, and the other terminal of the switch is connected to the load.
It is in parallel, so one light can be on while others are turned off.
In parallel.
The wired telephone connection from your house to the phone co wired circuits.