Wikipedia:Recent additions#April 27 2010
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{{redirect|WP:DYKA|the list of approved Did you know nominations|WP:DYKNA}}
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Did you know...
=4 May 2025=
- 00:00, 4 May 2025 (UTC)
{{main page image/DYK|image=Filodes fulvidorsalis lachryphagy.png|caption=Filodes fulvidorsalis drinking tears from a human eye}}
- ... that some insects drink the tears (example pictured) of their predators?
- ... that the Vatican's website was first made available in Latin under Pope Benedict XVI?
- ... that Blue Origin NS-31 recently became the first all-female spaceflight in 62 years?
- ... that a disused industrial pier was incorporated into a city park?
- ... that a cultivar of Aquilegia flabellata has been called "as beautiful as a columbine needs to be"?
- ... that George R. Dale was sent to prison by a judge whom he accused of being in the Ku Klux Klan?
- ... that the sled dog race Ivakkak features two mushers riding on the dog sled?
- ... that Major League Baseball's first Pride Night came about after a lesbian couple were removed from a Los Angeles Dodgers game for kissing?
- ... that people in parts of India, North America, and Africa marry tree trunks?
=3 May 2025=
- 00:00, 3 May 2025 (UTC)
{{main page image/DYK|image=Walser House 1.JPG|caption=J. J. Walser Jr. House}}
- ... that Chicago's deteriorating J. J. Walser Jr. House (pictured) has not been repaired because it is unclear who owns the house?
- ... that the lifeboat Sir William Hillary was sent to Dover in case of aircraft crashes, but did not save anyone from an aircraft in ten years' service with the Royal National Lifeboat Institution?
- ... that Martha Burgess{{`s}} 1993 sculpture of two female World War II personnel kissing was inspired by the photograph V-J Day in Times Square{{-?}}
- ... that on the first day of the 1995 São Tomé and Príncipe coup d'état, President Miguel Trovoada emerged from hiding in his pajamas and nightgown?
- ... that Marcia Coyle, who covers the U.S. Supreme Court for PBS News Hour, got her start in journalism by writing obituaries?
- ... that Dutch East India Company officials considered the inhabitants of the Bungku Kingdom to be "the fiercest of all Malukan peoples"?
- ... that Ardo Hansson was appointed to the committee overseeing the transition from the Soviet ruble to the Estonian kroon as a replacement for someone who fell ill?
- ... that Keurbos{{'s}} placement within arthropods is uncertain, as its two surviving fossils lack limbs?
- ... that Green Thumb Industries produces cannabis on lands of a former prison?
=2 May 2025=
- 00:00, 2 May 2025 (UTC)
{{main page image/DYK|image=Sanahin bridge 2019-06-22 v2.jpg|caption=Sanahin Bridge}}
- ... that the Sanahin Bridge (pictured) has stood intact for more than 800 years?
- ... that a tornado estimated to be one of the strongest on record planted maize crops in Greenfield, Iowa?
- ... that four generations of the British royal family had a summer barbecue at Inchnabobart?
- ... that the midnight shadow docket order in Tandon v. Newsom was called the most important religious free exercise decision in 30 years?
- ... that William Jenkins Wilcox Jr. was given a Citizen Archivist award at a symposium titled "Secret City in the Tennessee Hills: From Dogpatch to Nuclear Power"?
- ... that only Greenland Dogs may race in Avannaata Qimussersua?
- ... that Bangladeshi singer Abanti Sithi has used plastic cups, foil paper and metal coins as musical instruments?
- ... that Marguerite McDonald performed the world's first laser correction surgery on the normal eye of a living human patient?
- ... that Donald Trump would "much prefer not having a picture than having this one"?
=1 May 2025=
- 00:00, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
{{main page image/DYK|image=Sequoites dakotensis.jpg|caption=Sequoites dakotensis cone cast fossils}}
- ... that Sequoites dakotensis was first described from clay-filled casts (examples pictured) and not the original tree cones?
- ... that before becoming an actor, Jeremy Allen White trained in ballet, jazz, and tap dancing?
- ... that Laurence Sterne's journal of love letters reverses the found-manuscript literary device by claiming that his real diary is fictional?
- ... that Katsumaro Akamatsu, a founding member of the Japanese Communist Party, supported the expulsion of communists from the Japanese Federation of Labour?
- ... that Eleanor Island was first designated as a Migratory Bird Sanctuary and later as a National Wildlife Area to give it a stronger protection status?
- ... that Vermont politician William Baxter personally funded the construction of an Orleans County school, provided that the second floor was used for religious purposes?
- ... that a fictional character from Peg O' My Heart complained about his insomnia with netizens on Threads?
- ... that a candidate in the 1968 United States House of Representatives election in Delaware took his dog on the campaign trail?
- ... that an elderly Brazilian woman helped to arrest dozens of drug traffickers and corrupt police officers?
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