Meet Australian-Sudanese model Nyadack Duckie Thot. Her beauty is so surprising that she looks like a real barbie.
Can you imagine meeting your doppelgänger, who has no blood relation to you, moreover, lives in another part of the world, but still looks incredibly similar to you? This is what happened to these complete strangers who were lucky enough to meet their "identical twins".
Culture is not just reading books and going to theaters, it is who you are.
The Miele Experience Center in Maribor is a state-of-the-art and thoughtfully designed showroom, where a team of experts will help you research and discover the best household assistants!
On the fifth anniversary of their partnership, adidas and the environmental organization Parley For The Oceans have renewed their commitment to the joint fight against ocean plastic pollution, releasing a special line of adidas Parley UltraBOOST DNA sneakers made from yarns and threads from recycled ocean waste.
"There is only one way to earn love in this world - to stop asking for it and start giving it without expecting anything in return."
Gene mutations are the result of evolution, and everyone is bound to have at least one of these four mutations.
Olimpline, the longest zipline in Slovenia, which is said to be the longest continuous adrenaline descent in Europe, will be opened in Črna na Koroškem on July 4!
Just thinking about childhood makes us feel tender and nostalgic. We lived in different times, grew up somewhat freer and more humble. And some memories are so strong that we still remember them today. Often they are related to tastes. The latter are something that can be remembered for a lifetime.
The startup company Space Perspective wants to take you to the edge of our universe, from where you can admire our beautiful planet! The first passengers are expected to fly into the "unknown" as early as next year.
In 1850, the French economist Claude-Frédéric Bastiat published his famous essay "Ce qu'on voit et ce qu'on ne voit pas" or "What is seen and what is not seen". In it, he objects to the "bad economist" who looks only at the initial effect of the measures taken and not at their further consequences.