Toilet Repair Quiz

Quiz: Do you know how to Repair a Toilet?In which country is 'I must ease myself' a euphemism for going to the toilet? Which British monarch died falling off a toilet? Approximately what proportion of the world’s population don’t have access to adequate sanitation? Which key do most toilets flush in? Approximately how many children die every day from diarrhoea caused by unsafe water and poor sanitation? According to Turkish-American doctor Mehmet Oz, the perfect stool is shaped like which letter? True or false: diarrhoea kills more children than malaria, HIV and Aids, and measles combined After India and China, which country has the most people without access to adequate sanitation? Which of these is a euphemism for the toilet used by ancient Egyptian rulers? The House of Morning The House of Evening The House of the Night In the Kenyan slum of Mukuru, how much do you have to pay each time you used the toilet?The requested URL /mq/uttake.php?id=134497 was not found on this server.

Click here to go back to the home pageQuiz of the Year: 52 weeks 52 questions, part four It's the fourth and final part of the Magazine's quiz of the year. Test your recollection of 2015 over four days with four sets of 12 questions - themed on the lines of "who?", "what?", "why?" and "where?" - and a four-part puzzler. In addition to the questions above, we're also posing an extra puzzler - one photograph for each four parts of the quiz, all adding up to a single answer.
Where To Get Dwarf CatHere they all are:
Modern White Lace Curtains If you missed the first three parts of the quiz, catch up with them here, here and here.
Standard Curtain Lengths And Widths The solution to the four-part bonus question will be published in a special edition of the BBC News Magazine newsletter on Christmas Eve - subscribe here to get it sent to your inbox.

You can suggest answers on our Facebook page.Subscribe to the BBC News Magazine's email newsletter to get articles sent to your inbox. Clinton diagnosed with pneumonia US presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has been treated for pneumonia her doctor discloses after she was taken ill at a 9/11 ceremony in New York. Services mark 9/11 15th anniversary France foiling terror plots 'daily' Life and death in America’s murder capital Can the US Paralympics team ever fulfil their potential? Amy Adams makes contact with extraterrestrials Getting my hands on a bottle of North Korea’s finest The Instagram star who may not exist Indonesian seaweed farmers launch major oil spill lawsuit India begins fresh fight against leprosy Battle of the brainwave caps and robotic limbs Why only one Cosby accuser will face him in criminal courtOkay, you walk into a public restroom and you see three stalls. Which do you choose to use? The 1st (i.e. the one closest to you?), the middle, or the third (i.e. the furthest away from you and usually a handicap stall)?

Studies have been done to see which stalls are used most often, and thereby figuring out which stalls are dirtiest and which are cleanest.We all have our different reasons for why we pick the stalls we do. Most of us skip the first stall cause we think everyone uses that one and so it has to be the dirtiest in the bathroom. However, that changed after a study was done and showed that the first stall is the cleanest because everyone avoids it thinking it is the most frequently used.Many use the middle stall because they want to save their brainpower for more important decisions. They don't want to take the time psychoanalyzing whether to use the first or the last and therefore just fall in between.Then you have people that will only use the furthest and last stall even if they have to wait in line. Some do this because they get the most privacy and they don't have to worry about people peeking in the awkward cracks.We won't even get into what would happen if someone was already in the middle stall.

That adds a whole new dimension. Therefore, let us address this question with an empty public restroom.So, for whatever your conscious or subconscious reasons, your choice is really telling us a little bit about you.You are hereHome » Toilet Teaching: The True/False Quiz Toilet Teaching: The True/False QuizOver 17 billion TP tubes are used each year. That's enough to fill the Empire State Building, twice. How many of those belong to your household? Answer the three questions below to see how many TP tubes you'll eliminate by tossing the tube for good. are in your household? Every second, 538 TP tubes are used in the U.S. Go to Next Question The average person spends three years on the toilet over the course of their life. Go to Final Question Guys use more toilet paper, but gals use it more frequently. Your Household's Estimated Lifetime Tube Usage That's enough TP tubes to fill an entire SUV. Toss the tube for good. See Your Friends Impact >>

Image is calculated for the average number of tubes used. Why Toss The Tube For Good? Enough TP tubes are used each year to fill the Empire State Building, twice. With Scott® Tube-Free Bath Tissue, you can get premium softness without the wasteful tube. Watch our TV commercial. People's reactions to the impact of #TossTheTube have been heartfelt and inspiring.Watch the Edge: When Unsafe Pavement Drop-Offs Cause Accidents with Devastating Consequences 2 weeks ago MTV Series: Unlocking The Truth 3 weeks ago Pokemon Go: Have You Read the Fine Print? Tesla Autopilot Crash: Who Is Responsible When Autonomous Vehicles Crash? Tips for Choosing a Safe Car for your Teenager 2 months ago Feds Warn: Stop Driving Honda Vehicles Until Takata Airbags Are Replaced 2 months ago Litigation Tips Related to Truck Driver Fatigue 2 months ago Risks in Auto Repairs with Aftermarket Parts 2 months ago Missouri Governor Vetoes Tort Reform Bills 2 months ago

IKEA Recall Highlights Risk of Tipping / Falling Furniture 3 months ago Home ‣ Missouri ‣ Kansas City “Is It Low T” Quiz Was Written on Toilet Paper The site is funded by a pharmaceutical company, AbbVie (which was recently spun off from Abbott Laboratories). AbbVie manufacturers the most popular testosterone replacement therapy drug, AndroGel, with more than a billion dollars in sales in a year. But you wouldn’t know it by looking at the “Is It Low T” website. The only reference to AbbVie is some fine print on various pages, such as at the top of the page that says merely, “Supported by AbbVie”. There’s no reference to AndroGel at all. Obviously, the site is designed to sell AndroGel, but only indirectly. What the site is really designed to do is sell the disease. It’s what’s known as an “unbranded site”. The sole purpose is to convince you that you (or the man in your life) has this “disease” called “Low T”.

And the site provides a handy little quiz so you can self-diagnose and ask your doctor about this “disease.” But it turns out that this handy little quiz was created in 20 minutes while the author, Dr. John E. Morley, was in the bathroom (yes, in the bathroom for 20 minutes) and authored scribbled the quiz on toilet paper, which he gave to his secretary to transcribe (editor’s note: Ewwww). For this, Dr. Morley was paid $40,000 by the Dutch drug company that commissioned the test. Oh yeah – and the quiz was designed so that you would fail. Just take a look. Do you have a decrease in libido (sex drive)? Do you have a lack of energy? Do you have a decrease in strength and/or endurance? Have you lost height? Have you noticed a decrease in your enjoyment of life? Are you sad and/or grumpy? Are your erections less strong? Have you noticed a recent deterioration in your ability to play sports? Are you falling asleep after dinner?

Has there been a recent deterioration in your work performance? Answering “yes” to as few as one of these questions will “qualify” you as a candidate for having “Low T”. Most of the questions invoke symptoms that are so general that they could apply to many men who are clinically depressed or simply having a bad day – or even to women, says Dr. Adriane J. Fugh-Berman, an associate professor at Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington. “These are tests that everyone will fail – that is the idea,” says Dr. Fugh-Berman, who directs PharmedOut, a Georgetwon project that educates doctors about drug marketing claims. “Do you feel tired after dinner? Depends how long after dinner. We all do eventually. – Selling That New-Man Feeling [NYT] According to a New York Times report, the Dutch drug company instructed Dr. Morley, “Don’t make it too long and make it somewhat sexy.” The Endocrine Society, a professional medical association warned in 2010 that there little evidence supporting self-diagnosing quizzes.

Turns out that Dr. Morley likely agrees: “I have no trouble calling it a crappy questionnaire,” he says. “It is not ideal.” Testosterone supplements, like AndroGel, have been approved only to treat a very specific condition – hypogonadism – along with documented low testosterone levels. “None of the testosterone products have indications for weight loss, increasing energy or improving mood,” said Andrea Fischer, a spokeswoman for the F.D.A. But “unbranded” advertisements like the “Is It Low T” web site are not subject to strict FDA scrutiny. How good is the testosterone industry at not only selling their products, but selling the disease? A marketing trade magazine named the AndroGel marketing team as “the all-star large pharma marketing team of the year” for its promotions of AndroGel and its unbranded marketing to simply sell the disease. As these companies have been pushing and pushing and pushing this “disease” and their products to treat it, researchers have begun to look and see what else these “supplements” may be doing to men across the country.