Depends what you're after.Please suggest some movies related to sports (any genre) .
Your wish cometh true xPlease suggest some movies related to sports (any genre) .
Please suggest some movies related to sports (any genre) .
MS Dhoni - The Untold Story.Please suggest some movies related to sports (any genre) .
Was talking to people today about this - I hear it as Yanny, but it was very split.Anybody see the Yanny-Laurel thing? If you don't know, it's kind of listening thing where a word either sounds like Laurel or Yanny.
Anybody see the Yanny-Laurel thing? If you don't know, it's kind of listening thing where a word either sounds like Laurel or Yanny.
Apparently many people hear differently.
I don't know why, it's sounds like Laurel for me!! It's been annoying to see how people are able to hear Yanny.
Yes! It sounds Laurel to me, too. I'm also annoyed by how people hear it as "Yanny".
Was talking to people today about this - I hear it as Yanny, but it was very split.
I found that changing the pitch gets me to hear the Laurel - I have to make it higher pitched to hear Laurel, so presumably people who hear that normally, if they listened to a lower pitched version might hear the yanny. I saw a video that does that, but amusingly in their example higher pitched I still hear it as Yanny, though if I go even higher it turns.
Apparently that means I'm hearing higher frequencies better, which I suppose is a good thing because I generally assumed my hearing was terrible.
All down to hearing perception the fact we all hear different frequencies but in same wave band or sumthing like thatIf you look at the original post on Reddit, you can clearly hear 'Yanny'. The kne on twitter however, sounds like Laurel. Go see what you guys think of the one on Reddit.
I don't know the technical term but the reason is- That's because 'King' is used only when one is inheriting the crown. In this case, Elizabeth inherited the crown and became Queen and Philip is her husband, thus became Prince and not King.Why is Queen Elizabeth's husband not called a King but a Prince?
I don't know the technical term but the reason is- That's because 'King' is used only when one is inheriting the crown. In this case, Elizabeth inherited the crown and became Queen and Philip is her husband, thus became Prince and not King.