49 Facts I Learned This Year That — Surprisingly — Like, A Lot Of People Don't Know
Several times this year, I shared lists of "little-known facts" — aka facts BuzzFeed readers and Redditors alike revealed that most people either get wrong or, for whatever reason, are simply never taught.
So you can enter 2025 even smarter than you were in the beginning of 2024 (which I'm willing to bet is already pretty dang smart!), I rounded up the commonly unknown facts people taught us this year:
As always, to keep this list from being ten thousand pages long, these are only summaries and by no means exhaustive explanations on all these topics. If you'd like to do a deep dive of your own, sources are linked out for each fact. Happy learning! 🤓
1."The human body glows in the dark. No, seriously. It emits visible light at all times, but our eyes are too weak to see it. So yeah, you’re glowing right now, but no one can appreciate it."
2."It took a long time for the Giant Tortoise to be scientifically recognized because to be catalogued, a sample had to reach London. Turtles turn out to be really, really good to eat."
3."Your skin doesn't have receptors to let you know if it's wet or not. This is why those sensory deprivation tanks have you floating in it. When the water is warm enough, your skin stops sensing the 'wetness' and you just feel like you're floating in the air."
4."The difference between less and fewer. 'Fewer' is used when something is countable, ie: Bob has fewer apples than Sally. 'Less' is used when it’s not, ie: Bob shows less kindness to horses than Sally.'"
—u/trigunnerd and u/not_thrilled
5."That butterflies retain memories from their larval (caterpillar) form. So while it is all goo in the pupa form, something is keeping some memories intact."
6."If there are 23 people in a room, the probability that two people have the same birthday is over 50%."
7."There's a thing called the Royal Order of Adjectives. This rule dictates the specific order in which adjectives should be arranged in a sentence, and native speakers follow it instinctively without being taught."
The order is: quantity, opinion, size, age, shape, color, origin/material, and qualifier. For example: A lovely small old square brown French leather handbag. It sounds wrong if you deviate from this order, but many people aren’t consciously aware of it! When you say something like 'A lovely small old square French leather brown handbag,' other naive speakers will wonder what French leather is. "
8."I remember reading that if you look at pictures of sick people, your immune system will automatically give itself a little boost just by looking at the pictures."
9."The story of Humpty Dumpty doesn’t explicitly state that he is an egg."
10."UTIs in the elderly can cause them to hallucinate or be disoriented."
Older patients with UTIs tend to have untraditional symptoms. They often experience symptoms such as delirium, tachycardia, frequent falling, or — in more extreme cases — hallucinations.
11."Rabbits don't have paw pads like cats or dogs. They've got nothing but fluffy feet. If you see a cartoon rabbit with paw pads, it's all lies."
12."Sign language isn't universal. Sign languages are their own unique languages, not just a signed version of spoken language."
13.Humans have stripes. We just can't usually see them. They're called Blaschko's lines, and according to the American Osteopathic College of Dermatology, they're patterns on "the skin that represent the developmental growth pattern during epidermal cell migration."
Suggested by: Probablynotspiders
14.St. Patrick was not, in fact, Irish. Despite being the patron Saint of Ireland (and St. Patrick's Day generally being a celebration of Irish pride and culture), St. Patrick was actually born in Scotland. He ended up in Ireland after being kidnapped by Irish pirates and kept as a shepherd.
15."The first English scientists to receive a preserved platypus were so absolutely 100% convinced it was a hoax that he nearly took the specimen apart trying to find evidence that it had been assembled from multiple different animals."
16."The fax machine was invented in the 1800s, well before the telephone."
It's not the fax machine we know today, but the "original" fax machine (aka the electric printing telegraph) was invented in 1843 by Alexander Baine. In contrast, the telephone was invented decades later in 1876 by Alexander Graham Bell. Big century for Alexanders, it seems!
17."A pony is not a baby horse. A baby horse is called a foal. A pony is a horse that as an adult is below a certain height."
18."Zebras are black with white stripes."
19."Words that are spelled the same but pronounced with emphasis on different syllables are actually indicative of the part of speech they are. Stress on the first syllable is a noun. Stress on the last syllable is a verb. Examples: CON-tract and con-TRACT. The former is a noun (sign this contract), whereas the latter is a verb (the muscles contract). Same with record, address, impact, object, and a few others."
20."There's a jellyfish that doesn't have an anus! Whenever too much waste product builds up in its body, it simply makes a hole somewhere on its body, discharges the waste, and then the hole closes back up again."
21."The fact there are multiple ski resorts in Australia. Always seems to blow people's minds."
22."We all know the dinosaurs died out a long time ago (~65 million years ago). But what's even longer: they roamed the Earth for 165 million years. The Stegosaurus went extinct 66 million years before the T-Rex even existed."
23."The Children's Crusade was a Holy Crusade made up nearly entirely of children. Their goal was to siege and take the Holy Lands for the Catholics, fixing their fathers' and brothers' perceived failures and taking the city. Most of them died before getting anywhere out of Europe."
24."Poison dart frogs are only poisonous if you feed them toxic bugs. They are perfectly safe to handle if you feed them crickets."
25."Babies have more bones than adults. A lot more."
Babies are born with about 300 bones, whereas adults have 206 bones. As babies get older, some of their bones begin to fuse together. For instance, babies tend to have soft spots on their heads, which feel a lot different than the hard heads we adults have. Well, as babies age, those soft spots "close up" as the bones in their head fuse, giving them the skulls we have as adults. You can read more about the process here.
26."Froot Loops are all just one flavor."
27."Animals can see completely different colors than us. Pretty wild when you think about it."
28."Previously fish-free lakes and ponds can be populated by fish thanks to migrating ducks. When ducks eat fish eggs, some of them can pass through the digestive system unharmed and hatch in new waterways."
29."Uppercase letters are called that because they could be found in the upper drawer of a printing press, lowercase could be found in the lower case of the printing press."
30."Rollercoasters are built to shake! I’ve seen so many people decide not to get on because of the swaying, but it’s important! If the support beams and tracks didn’t shake, they’d simply snap with all the force from the coaster cars roaring over them."
31."Also, roller coasters — at least the traditional kind — don’t have any engines. Typically, there’s a slope at the start where a chain in the track pulls the cars up to the top. After that, it’s all gravity and momentum. Takes some careful design to ensure that the cars don’t run out of (metaphorical) steam before the end."
32."German chocolate cake was made by an American named Samuel German. Not an actual German."
33."Flamingos get their pink color from the seafood they eat. Change the food, and they'd be a different color."
34."Deoxygenated/venous blood isn’t blue, it’s dark red."
You might've been taught as a child that the blood flowing through your veins is blue because it hasn't been exposed to oxygen. That, however, is a myth. It's actually a dark red color. When you look at a vein in your arm, for instance, it only appears blue or purple-ish because you're viewing it through layers of fat and skin.
35."That your car’s fuel gauge has a little arrow next to the gas pump icon indicating which side your gas cap is on. Super handy when driving a rental or a new car."
36."There are more bones in gummy worms than real worms."
37."The term 'bug' in computing has been around for a long time. The term was not commonly used until an actual bug landed on an electrical switch, causing the computer to malfunction. The term bug grew in popularity afterward and landed us where we are today. Also, when we find a bug in software, we apply a 'patch.' This comes from old cardex/punch card systems. If a punch card was punched in the wrong spot, you could fix it by applying a patch to the hole."
The use of the term 'bug' to refer to an error or glitch can be traced all the way back to Thomas Edison in the early 1800s. As OP said above, it gained popularity in computer science after 1947, when a team at Harvard discovered that the reason their computer (Mark II) was having consistent errors was because an actual bug — a moth — had gotten inside the hardware and was messing with its functionality.
38."There is a jellyfish that is 'immortal.' It returns back to pupa state and then again grows and repeats the cycle!"
39."I recently learned that goodbye is a shortened form of 'God Be With You,' which people in Ye Olde England would say to each other."
40."The word 'set' holds the record for having the most definitions of any single word."
According to Guinness World Records, there are 430 different definitions for the word 'set' in the 1989 Second Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary. In fact, the entry is 60k words.
41."The release of all of the original Star Wars trilogy is closer in time to WWII than the present day."
42."Water towers are for water pressure, not just a town putting its name on a tank and saying, 'Hey, look how much dang water WE have.'"
43."Your pee is filtered out of your BLOOD by your kidneys. There's no direct route for that glass of water from swallow to kidneys to pee (like food/feces has it's own set of pipes, from in to out). Water goes into your blood circulation (absorbed through the gut) and at some point, it gets lifted by your kidneys (along with other waste products) via your blood."
"It probably sounds breathtakingly obvious to many of you, but I teach A&P as part of my job, and many people don't initially realize that. They assume that there's some separate tube that takes fluids direct to the kidneys because they've just never really thought about it."
44."Trees get the vast majority of their mass from the air. All that wood? That was once carbon dioxide and sunlight."
45."The component parts of the word helicopter are not 'heli' and 'copter.' It’s 'helico,' meaning 'spiral-shaped' like the word 'helix,' and 'pter' meaning 'wing' as in 'pterodactyl.'"
46."The tune of the ‘Alphabet Song’ is actually the ‘Twinkle Twinkle Little Star’ tune."
47."Plumbing comes from the root Latin word of 'plumbum', which means lead, and is the reason it's Pb on the Periodic table. The Romans made water pipes out of lead."
48.Most of the oxygen we breathe doesn't actually come from trees. When you were in school, you probably learned about how trees and other plants use carbon dioxide — what we breathe out — in the process of photosynthesis, which creates oxygen — what we breathe in — as a byproduct. People often assume that most of the oxygen we breathe comes from trees or other plant-dense forests, but that's not true. According to National Geographic, only about 28% of oxygen on Earth comes from rainforests.
49.And lastly, "That sharks are older than the rings of Saturn."
Saturn's rings are estimated to be no more than 400 million years old. Comparatively, sharks date back to the Late Ordovician Period, or about 450 million years ago.
Do you know any little-known facts like these? If so, please share them with us in the comments below! They just might end up in a future BuzzFeed Community post!