GeeString's Posts
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2) Mosquito The most dangerous creature in Africa is probably the mosquito since it’s responsible for killing more Africans than any other through the spread of malaria, dengue and other diseases. Malaria kills over a million Africans every year, most of these are children under the age of five. Malaria is only spread by the female Anopheles mosquito. They are most active around dawn and dusk. There are in fact around 3,500 species of mosquito flying around and their average life-span is about two weeks.
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1) Hippopotamus The hippo is responsible for more human fatalities in Africa than any other large animal. Male hippos actively defend their territories which run along the banks of rivers and lakes. Females have also been known to get extremely aggressive if they sense anyone coming in between their babies, who stay in the water while she feeds on the shore. Hippos can run at speeds of over 20 miles an hour and they have enormous jaws which host up to 20 inch canines. Source: https://lowvelder.co.za/245166/10-dangerous-animals-africa/
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wjxavier:Your brain tested positive for cement. |
OP, Ab○kis have exchanged your brain for cedis |
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This one is the spiritual adviser to his G+ sons & using Church to mask it. Maga don pay.
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MissRaine69:You have no point please. Marriage will hinder her career indeed. Very weak & baseless opinion. Absolute BS. |
MissRaine69:You have no point please. Marriage will hinder her career indeed. BS. |
MissRaine69:Couples dont travel abroad to further their education & work? If he doesnt support her career aspirations now what makes you think he will when she is through reading it say in 5 years time? When she is done with school, stays independent & finally gets married and then encounters ALL these negatives you have pointed out, what then? What was the point of delaying it? They can all still happen even after she has "experienced the world" as you put it. If she isnt ready then he isnt ready, but dont try to tell us marriage will hinder her career now. That's utter BS. |
DWJOBScom:Marriage will stop her from travelling? Lol |
MissRaine69:The summary of this epistle is that you cannot state what those things you claim marriage will prevent her from achieving are. Simple. |
ubunja:
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PrimadonnaO:So why is it so difficult to state these things up till now? Do the words not exist in the dictionary? Is she searching the internet franctically for an answer right now to save her face? Maybe you can help her out. |
DWJOBScom:Thank you! Im also curious. By "she wants to see the world - experience life", trust me, she means sex. |
MissRaine69:Its very simple madam. Tell us what those "dreams & aspirations" are. Education? Health? Career? Tell us. We want to learn. Except you mean 'sexperience' because that's all I can see marriage will stop. |
MissRaine69:What "dreams & aspirations" can you not achieve in marriage? The dude doesn't have "dreams & aspirations" too? I don't see any sense in your comment except by "dreams & aspirations", you mean sexcapades & promiscuity. You want her to sleep around from dick to dick before she can be "experienced". Na una way. |
idgaf
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Well...
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What's the difference between yur life now & as a married woman? Is he not Bleep¡ng you everyday? Marry him now or end up begging men to notice you in 5 years time like Biacan. Till then...
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Still too high...
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Buhari's fault is all I can say. The misery under him keeps piling up. |
FeelDeMusic:
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Damibiz:Hang on... You're saying you know the dick sizes of Gwagwalada men. Bros, how?? |
What exactly am I doing on her ass? |
She is a Nairaland feminist no doubt... |
Russia hit back at Britain in the spy poisoning row, demanding proof of its alleged involvement in a nerve agent attack, as international weapons experts arrived to take samples of the toxic substance. The March 4 poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal, which took place just two weeks ahead of Russia's presidential poll in which Vladimir Putin was re-elected, has plunged relations between London and Moscow into crisis. As the European Union offered Britain its "unqualified solidarity" on Monday, the Kremlin demanded London either come up with proof of Russia's involvement -- or apologise. "Sooner or later these unsubstantiated allegations will have to be answered for: either backed up with the appropriate evidence or apologised for," said Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov. Putin himself on Sunday rejected as "complete drivel, rubbish, nonsense" the allegations by London and its allies that Russia was behind the attack on Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the English city of Salisbury. Speaking in Brussels alongside British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson on Monday, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Russia's response had so far "demonstrated a clear disregard for international peace and security". - 'Pattern of behaviour' - British Prime Minister Theresa May on Monday repeated her belief that Russia was responsible. "They have the capability. This nerve agent was one from a group of Novichoks that were developed by the Soviets," she said while visiting Birmingham. "Russia has the capability and, I believe, the motive and intent and this is part of a pattern of behaviour we see from Russia across Europe," she said. Britain has pointed to the 2006 radiation poisoning of former spy and Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko in London -- blamed on Moscow -- and Russian activity in Crimea and Ukraine. Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, meeting in Warsaw Monday, agreed that "the European Union needs to provide a strong response, and not just a symbolic one", Morawiecki said. The comment came after Britain, France, Germany and the United States issued a joint statement last week blaming Russia for the attack, the first offensive use of chemical weapons in Europe since World War II. EU foreign ministers on Monday offered Britain their full support, although sources say some states have been reluctant to put pressure on Moscow over the incident. "The European Union takes extremely seriously the UK government's assessment that it is highly likely that the Russian Federation is responsible," they said. The nerve agent attack is expected to be discussed at an EU summit in Brussels starting on Thursday. Russia's foreign ministry issued a statement Monday saying it was "perplexed by the extreme haste EU members have considered... the British inventions over Russia's involvement in the tragic incident in Salisbury. "We regret that the EU, by omitting obvious facts and considerations, has once again fallen victim to 'European solidarity' and accumulated anti-Russian reflexes." - Putin defiant - Skripal, a former Russian officer who sold secrets to Britain and moved there in a 2010 spy swap, remains in critical condition along with his daughter after they were found unconscious on a park bench. Investigators from the international Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) arrived in Britain on Monday to collect samples of the nerve agent used. They will meet officials from the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory at Porton Down, where the chemical was identified as the Soviet-designed Novichok. They will also meet police before sending samples to international laboratories for testing, with results expected to take at least two weeks, according to British officials. Britain last week announced the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats, prompting a tit-for-tat response from Moscow. Britain also announced a boycott by members of the royal family and ministers of this summer's World Cup football tournament in Russia. The US, France and Germany have also called for Russia to fully disclose details of its Novichok programme to the OPCW, a demand also backed by the EU foreign ministers. French President Emmanuel Macron repeated Monday that Moscow should "shed light on the responsibilities for the unacceptable attack in Salisbury, and to firmly regain control of any programmes that have not been declared" to the OPCW. But his first direct comments on the incident, after winning a fourth term in Russia's election on Sunday, Putin was defiant. "We have destroyed all chemical weapons," he said, pledging that Russia was ready to cooperate in the investigation. On Sunday, Britain's Johnson accused Moscow of stockpiling the nerve agent over the last ten years in violation of the international Chemical Weapons Convention. But Moscow has suggested that Britain itself may have been the source of the chemical, along with Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Sweden -- who strongly denied it. lalasticlala, seun
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ben432:Why you come shout am? |
