It has been a while since we had a list of factlets, so today we are presenting our latest in a long series of facts lists. Here, we look at miscellaneous subjects which are connected by the fact that they are all trivia items we often get wrong (in many cases with good reason, as you will see). Be sure to add your own erroneous facts to the comments.

1. When a person is livid, they are ashen (pale) not red.
2. Model T Fords initially came out in a variety of colors – not just black. However, between 1914 and 1925 you could only buy one in black. It is also wrong that Ford said the buying public could have a Model T in any color as long as it were black. Pictured above is Brewster Green Model T Ford.
3. Continuing on with our color theme, even though most black bears are black, they also come in white, brown, cinnamon and blue, depending on where in the world they are found.
4. Black boxes in planes are not black – they are orange. This is to help investigators locate it by sight if necessary after a crash. The name was chosen entirely for humor reasons.
5. Pirates didn’t walk the plank nor did they make people walk the plank. Walking the plank is a myth. When a pirate wanted to dispose of someone they did the most obvious and simple thing: they tossed them overboard.

6. The sound you hear when you snap your fingers is not caused by the connection of your fingers – it is the sound of your middle finger hitting the base of your thumb.
7. Covered bridges were usually built not to protect people traveling on them, but to protect the bridges themselves. This is because early bridges were usually made from wood and needed to be protected from the elements. Keeping the rain off people crossing is just a bonus.
8. Einstein was awarded the Nobel prize, not for his theory of relativity but for his less well known work on the photoelectric effect of light.
9. In the US, a person can be tried twice for the same crime if it violates both federal and state law. In these cases the fifth amendment is overridden by a 1922 US Supreme Court decision.
10. The famous painting Whistler’s Mother (above) is not actually called that. It was originally called “Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 1: Portrait of the Painter’s Mother.” Whistler later changed it to Portrait of My Mother.

11. Rice paper is not made from rice – it is actually made from the pith of the plant Tetrapanax papyriferus (rice paper plant).
12. Even though there was much vocal opposition to the Vietnam war in the 1960s, a research paper done at the time discovered that 51% of young people supported it. However, 53% of those over the age of thirty thought the war was a mistake.
13. US ship captains may not perform weddings on board unless they are a priest, rabbi, minister, etc. There are even some regulations specifically prohibiting this even for those who are competent to perform the ceremony.
14. The glow surrounding the head of a saint in religious imagery is more technically known as a nimbus or gloriole. Halo is also right but it is a more generic term that applies to non-religious items.
15. The white rhinoceros is so-called not because it is white (it is actually gray-brown); in this context “white” is a corruption of the Afrikaans word “wijd” which means wide and refers to the animal’s lips.
This list is derived from the excellent book Sorry, Wrong Answer which I strongly recommend to everyone who loves lists of facts; it is an excellent book for a Christmas gift.




















hi guys. [I was just thinking the other day... the thing I really miss about the new LV is that Mr Frater doesn't get as involved as much as he used to. I think it got to a point where some folks were hammering down in his views and it seemed like JF vs the World - and I think JF got rather *****ed off with that happening and gave up. Chairing a blog is not easy, but is made easier with benevolence and a little humour. JF used to be excel at that, and helped make me (and others) feel very welcome to be here.]
Very interesting list today. It really got me thinking about #6. When I snap my fingers, it is the finger leaving the thumb that makes the noise. I can rest my finger on the thumb without striking it and I can still get it to make the noise. What I was told once, and of course I’d love this to be true, is that the noise actually comes from the fingers hitting the sound barrier as they strike, and the click is like a mini sonic boom. Just thought I’d throw that around.
Thanks.
Hey
You are right about the hammering – but it was really the hammering caused by kubrick and a sudden onslaught of trolls. It began just as I went on a 5 day holiday shortly after the release of the new version. I have been trying to be more involved in the comments of late but there are just so many and there seems to be more and more administration to take care of. What you readers don't see (thankfully) is the hours on the phone to advertising companies and the likes and the hundreds of emails every day from people trying to buy advertising, do text-link exchanges (which we don't do), and all manner of things. I love doing that stuff but it does take a lot of time.
And now Christmas is here and I have to do my baking and shopping etc. Busy busy.
Anyway – have a great Christmas!
Pirates actually did make people walk the plank, it just wasn't something that was used as commonly as people originally believed. But there have been cases where pirates would actually chain weights to the person's neck so they would sink faster. It happened, but it was rare.
Couldn't the author of this list just use the word factoid. "factlet" isn't a real word..
I have finger-ache now from trying to click my fingers
Still barely make a noise.. I think I'm the most unsuccessful finger-clicker in the world.
Who snaps with their middle finger??
Some of these were stupid. The one about the black box is only a myth to 5 year olds and the one about snapping your fingers is not even a myth lol. Who didn't think it was the sound of your fingers hitting the base of your thumb!?!? That is so obvious. No offense most of the other facts on this list were kind of boring.
13. US ship captains may not perform weddings on board unless they are a priest, rabbi, minister, etc. There are even some regulations specifically prohibiting this even for those who are competent to perform the ceremony.
Does this mean Mr. and Mrs. Howell were never married?
Number 6 is wrong.
On point 15, I think you mean the Dutch word and not the Afrikaans word. The Afrikaans work for wide is "Breedt" there is also "Wyd" which I think is considered slang and not proper. The Afrikaans word for white is "Wit" and this is were the confusion may exist. I scraped Afrikaans at school but I am sure I am right here.
"Wyd" is just as propper as Breedt. Breedt is a bit outdated actually… But thanks for the correction!
#12 shouldn’t be included on this list. A single poll taken at an undisclosed time doesn’t mean that young Americans supported the war in Vietnam. The majority most certainly DID NOT, being of draft age at the time, I’m grateful.
I love a factoid list! Thanks, Jamie! Now, blue bears? Do blue bears get blue balls?And I have been sitting here snapping my fingers to "see" if I can hear when the sound occurs from a snap. Harder than I thought.
The sound from snapping your fingers comes from cavitations within the joint. small cavities of partial vacuum form in the fluid and then rapidly collapse, producing a sharp sound
FACT: Chuck Norris does not hunt because the word hunting infers the probability of failure. Chuck Norris goes killing.
Fact #15:
"Wijd" is actually a Dutch word. The Afrikaans name for a white rhino is "wit renoster", which means "white rhino"
#6 is wrong. You can test and prove this yourself by inserting a soft or muffling piece of fabric over the flesh of the thumb and then proceed to snap as normal. Only a minor amount of sound is lost, the majority still remains.
From Henry Ford's autobiography, available at http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/7213/pg7213.h…
"Therefore in 1909 I announced one morning, without any previous warning, that in the future we were going to build only one model, that the model was going to be 'Model T,' and that the chassis would be exactly the same for all cars, and I remarked:
"'Any customer can have a car painted any colour that he wants so long as it is black.'"
Ugh, the snapping factlet is completely wrong. The noise doesn't come from your finger hitting the base of your thumb–it comes from your middle finger hitting the nail of your ring finger. (Try moving your ring finger so that the fingernail is more in the path of your middle finger when you snap and you'll find that it's louder.)
Actually the sound originates when the finger hits both the nail and the base of the thumb; it has something to do with the space in between.
Hey, great “facts”, but “wijd” is not Afrikaans, it’s Dutch (the mother language of Afrikaans). The correct word is “wyd”, which obiously means the same. But an interesting fact, seeing that I am incidentally Afrikaans.
After reading number six I spent about ten minutes trying to snap my fingers without touching the base of my thumb. I conclude it to be true.
Henry Ford did say that the public can have any color as long as it was black. at least thats what ford said in his autobiography.
Sorry, but this list is mostly bull***** and wrong.
Irony, it’s what’s for breakfast.
@Julius – we actually have kinder chocolate in australia, well at least down here in tasmania. its amazing!!
While it is true that a person can be tried both by the federal government as well as a state government for a single act, the Supreme Court case that held that is called “Blockburger”, and it was decided in 1932, not 1922. Also, it is not accurate to say that this case “overrides” the Fifth Amendmet. Nothing overrides an amendment to the Constitution. It is more accurate to say that the case “defines” the double jeopardy clause in order to allow prosecutions for a single act by different sovereigns (states and Feds.)
I live in South Africa and my home language is Afrikaans. There is no such word as "wijd" in my language, but the Afrikaans word for wide is "wyd". The word "wijd" was originally Dutch for wide and has not been used in the Afrikaans language in about 60-80 years.
The word for wide in Afrikaans isn’t “wijd” it is “wyd” the word “wijd” is dutch.
most of these i knew except for no.6 and no.9 which i couldnt care -less about it
i wonder when listverse gonna make great list inform me if they did
Hi there. This list is wonderful and its probably too late to change this, but as an Afrikaans speaking South African I think I can correct number 15. The Afrikaans word for “wide” is not “wijd,” rather it is “wyd,” pronounced “vaydt.” Keep up the good work!
The ‘wijd’ in the white rhino factlet is not Afrikaans, it is in fact Dutch. The Afrikaans word for wide is ‘wyd’.
Why didn’t I read the comments first. In hindsight though the white rhino was named so a long time ago, and it could therefore be correct to say that ‘wijd’ was an Afrikaans word. Since at that time the language was neither completely Dutch nor Afrikaan, but rather a ‘middle-point’ between the two languages.
The Afrikaans word for wide is “Wyd”
The Afrikaans word for wide is “wyd” not “wijt”
There is no such Afrikaans word as ‘wijd’ – I think that is Dutch. The Afrikaans word for wide is ‘wyd’ – obviously derived from Dutch. Which is quite close to the Afrikaans word for white, which is ‘wit’. And if I am correct, the wide refers to the rhino’s (renoster in Afrikaans) mouth/lip, which is wider than that of the Black Rhino.
Another fact (though a very sad one), the white rhino was declared “possibly extinct” as of November 10, 2011. The black rhino is officially extinct (not just “possibly” this time) as of November 10 as well.
The black box originally was black, then they realised it was almost impossible to find amongst wreckage and changed the colour. That’s why it’s called a black box, not for humour.
on number 15, Afrikaans for ‘wide’ is ‘wye’ not “wijd”
sorry ‘wyd’ – and ok i just saw others already pointed that out…
The thumb click I just had to try, and it is indeed true. It’s strange how we just accept information that isn’t necessarily correct like committing suicide by slitting your wrists. For the record; you can’t.
#6. NEAT!
#8. No kidding?!
#13. Wha–?
Great Facts, but no.15 is wrong. I’m an Afrikaans speaking person living in South Africa and the word “wijd” is not Afrikaans. The right Afrikaans word that the rhino is names after is “wyd” wich means wide.
Not to be mean or anything, great list, but the word “wijd” does not exist in afrikaans! However “wyd” does exist and it means wide. I think you mixed up your dutch and afrikaans