Bee Part of the Swarm Honey Pot - 27 August 2020 - This post CLOSED for Entries

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Where is the word Nectar derived from

Loved the Answers for yesterdays questions and some great reasearch done - In reality all Bees can fly higher than Mt Everest because Mt Everset cannot fly

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wtg Christian on win
Nectar is derived from Greek nektar, the fabled drink of eternal life-so Goole say.lol

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OMG Russ!! I just saw that answer from yesterday's question & REALLLY????? LMAOOOO 🤣🤣😂😂🐝 Bees are crying at that answer lmao.

ANYWAYS (ahem), congratulations to @chmoen!! :)

The word Nectar is derived from Greek nektar, the fabled drink of eternal life; a compound of nek, meaning death, and tar, meaning the ability to overcome. (No, I didn't know that - good old Wikipedia he he)

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Gotta love Wikipedia, it came up with some great answers for yesterdays question, and yes Nek Tar, almost sounds like a burden

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🤣🤣🤣 Yeah, kind of dark huh? hahaha

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LOL at Mt. Everest can't fly!!! Congrats @chmoen!!

nek=death; tar=the ability to overcome

Friday Jr!!! :) just a little more....

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And another intersting fact is that Honey in its natural state never goes off - Eternal Life

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I think there was a news article about that. Some 5,000 year old honey in a jar... 🤔🤔 lemme google that 😂🤣

Posted using Dapplr

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Congrats @chmoen for the win

Personally I have know idea of what nectar comes from so I will cheat and look at @pixiepost for the answer.

The word Nectar is derived from Greek nektar, the fabled drink of eternal life; a compound of nek, meaning death, and tar, meaning the ability to overcome.

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but isnt it great that we all have to look it up and learn one more new thing ever day

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HA HA HA you & @ph1102 are funny. Believe me, I had NO clue until my good friend Wikipedia told me haha. ;)

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congrats @chmoen

i had to googled it

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nectar
Nectar is derived from Greek nektar, the fabled drink of eternal life. The word is derived as a compound of nek, meaning death, and tar, meaning the ability to overcome. The common use of nectar refers to the "sweet liquid in flowers", first recorded in AD 1600.

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Well, it looks like the research is in on the meaning of "nectar"! Nectar, or the honey that bees produce from it, is said to be an elixir of life, which is also a version of the fabled philosophers' stone that the alchemists of old were searching for...

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Congrats to Christian for the win, and lmao Russell you pulled a trick question lol, and as to nectar consensus seems to point to the Greeks for the origin of the word.

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lol, at the trick question, everyone was so serius but it was good to see the answers :)

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Congratulations @chmoen for the win

Nectar is derived from Greek nektar, the fabled drink of eternal life.[2] The word is derived as a compound of nek, meaning death, and tar, meaning the ability to overcome.[2] The common use of nectar refers to the "sweet liquid in flowers", first recorded in AD 1600
info found here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nectar

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Gotta love Wikipedia and Google University :)

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Yes, wish I had it when i was going through high school computers and the internet were at there beginnings then lol :)

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Congratulations, @chmoen!

It looks that it's again from the Greek dictionary...

a compound of nek, meaning death, and tar, meaning the ability to overcome.

quoting @pixiepost :) She knows this stuff :)

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Ha ha ha yeah right. Wikipedia helped me on this one, but thanks for the faith ;) lol

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WTG on winning the honey pot today Christian

Nectar is derived from Greek nektar, the fabled drink of eternal life

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I wonder if any were dissapointed taht they didnt get eternal life, I guess they wouldnt as they are no longer around to be dissapointed

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Nectar is derived from Greek nektar, the fabled drink of eternal life.[2] The word is derived as a compound of nek, meaning death, and tar, meaning the ability to overcome.[2] The common use of nectar refers to the "sweet liquid in flowers",

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Congrats @chmoen!!

Nectar is derived from Greek The word is derived as a compound of nek, meaning death, and tar, meaning the ability to overcome. The common use of nectar refers to the "sweet liquid in flowers",

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