Quiz: Can You Match the Disease to Its Olde-Tyme Name?
Ailments have gone by various names over the centuries. How many of these can you guess correctly?
Ailments have gone by various names over the centuries. How many of these can you guess correctly?
The phrase has evolved somewhat since its first uses—and its origin is something of a mystery.
Asking a police officer “do you drink?” in the 1970s had nothing to do with grabbing a beer at a nearby bar.
Millennial women across the United States will remember rushing to their mailboxes after school to grab the hottest catalog of the ‘90s: dELiA*s.
The origins of the phrase 'missionary position' involve Alfred Kinsey, some shoddy research, and zero actual missionaries.
Here's how one transcription of Sojourner Truth's 1851 speech fabricated her most famous quote.
Legend has it that a heroic American commander at the Battle of Bunker Hill implored his men to hold their fire until their enemies were under their noses. But did the event actually happen?
The average body temperature isn't actually 98.6°F, a fact scientists have known for at least three decades. So why does this myth persist?
Picasso and his Blue Period have nothing on Yves Klein, who created art almost exclusively in a shade of his own invention.
Old English had a rich array of inventive and intriguing words, many of which have either long since dropped out of use or were replaced.
The Irei Project and Ancestry have teamed up to publish the most comprehensive list ever assembled of the more than 125,000 Japanese Americans who were incarcerated on American soil during WWII.
The Allied forces’ Normandy landings on June 6, 1944—an event better known as D-Day—became a pivotal moment in World War II .
The original Luddites were workers whose jobs were threatened by new technology—and who fought back.
The names were put into one of six different categories: ancestral, occupational, geographical, toponymic (or place name), personal characteristics, and patronage.
The oldest joke in recorded history is a fart joke that dates all the way back to 1900 BCE.
You’ve probably grown up your entire life without putting much thought into the nursery rhymes drilled into your head. But there are tales behind each of them—some pretty dark.
‘Les Femmes d’Alger’ (‘Women of Algiers’) isn’t a single artwork, but a series of 15 paintings—though one is more famous than the others.
In the scope of human history, the wheel is actually a rather young creation. Beer, clothing, and jewelry are much older.
These descriptions are as wild as they animals they talk about. Can you figure out which creatures they refer to?
The close quarters of those serving together in war is a perfect Petri dish for slang. From ‘FUBAR’ to ‘fobbit,’ here are some military slang terms you should know (plus, why the military uses so many acronyms, anyway).
How Johann Sebastian Bach and the Little Rock Nine inspired one of The Beatles’ biggest hits—and one of the most covered songs ever recorded.
Many nursery rhymes are attributed to Mother Goose. But was Mother Goose even a real person?
George Everest gave his name, if not the pronunciation of it, to Mount Everest.
Rin Tin Tin was found on a World War I battlefield in France before making his way to Hollywood, while poor Arnold the Pig was rumored to have been eaten after ‘Green Acres’ was canceled.