Even Twitter still calls it Twitter. pic.twitter.com/hVZ6Y4e5YZ
— Jay Foreman (@jayforeman) April 18, 2024
Dubai Airport right now
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) April 16, 2024
pic.twitter.com/FX992PQvAU
It's in no way concerning that a former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom needed three attempts to successfully hold up the cover of a book: pic.twitter.com/40GaTsGqjy
— Larry the Cat (@Number10cat) April 16, 2024
I've read three quarters of the way through the Bible and literally the main character of the whole thing just died.
— Richard Baxter (@NotThatRBaxter) April 17, 2024
It's gonna take a miracle to turn this around. pic.twitter.com/9Y1DgOsZHJ
No pre-title preview sequence on Race Across The World! A huge win for my dream to ABOLISH PRE-TITLES #AbolishPreTitles
— Nick Walker (@nickw84) April 17, 2024
The magic of physics.pic.twitter.com/SY08auspTH
— Figen (@TheFigen_) April 17, 2024
"why do train drivers earn so much more than bus drivers?" is a great economics question. https://t.co/MIGo57zCc2
— Tom Forth (@thomasforth) April 17, 2024
Best driver facing camera ever 😆 pic.twitter.com/FYEQh81kIU
— Williams Racing (@WilliamsRacing) April 19, 2024
Belgium's new national football team’s away kit has a blue shirt, brown shorts and white socks as a tribute to Tintin.
— Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) April 18, 2024
thinking about this woman who recorded this as a workout on strava pic.twitter.com/i0Z2bjVI3C
— “paula” (@paularambles) April 19, 2024
In Old English, the ampersand, '&', was considered the 27th letter of the alphabet. Children reciting the alphabet in school would chant 'per se', Latin for 'by itself', after letters that were words in themselves: 'A per se A, I per se I', etc, and also '& per se &'. This 'and…
— Susie Dent (@susie_dent) April 19, 2024
Herding the statues.. 😅 pic.twitter.com/yDmTKyW3aN
— Buitengebieden (@buitengebieden) April 18, 2024
I remember a professional chef saying that sieves should be rinsed in cold water, otherwise the food caught in the mesh will start to 'cook' in the warm water. It then becomes stuck. Of course, sieves are only for sieving. For draining food, something with larger holes is needed.
— Peter (@MoarPart) April 18, 2024

Anything to add...?