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Esta es una muestra de "Una chica a la moda (Golfistas 1)". La versión completa tiene una duración total de 21 h 21 min. Encuentra este audiolibro completo en https://bit.ly/3J6PIcFNarrado por: Ana RagasolCuando Dallas Beaudine encuentra a Francesca Day, ella está arruinada, furiosa y cojeando por una carretera remota con un vestido de época de dama sureña. La situación no hace sino empeorar para esta improbable pareja de amantes. Él es un tejano realmente atractivo, de carácter relajado. Ella, una belleza inglesa malcriada que ha tocado fondo. ¿Quién podría haber predicho que se convertirían en dos de los personajes más famosos de la novela romántica contemporánea? © 2022, Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial, S. A. U.#penguinaudio #audiolibro #audiolibros #Elizabeth Phillips #SusanElizabeth Phillips See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week, listener Rob emailed us to ask "Is dark matter in large lumps or like grains of sand?" Iacopo Russo got some help from the Little Prince story, as well as from Physics professor Francesca Day at Durham University and physicist Jacques Pienaar from the University of Chicago, to find the answer... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
We're wandering into the weird world of spiders! We'll be looking at spiders that can fly using little silk parachutes and the grisly and gruesome mating habits of black widow spiders. Plus in the news, as UK cases surge, should Covid precautions move to Plan B; how does raw sewage affect our waterways; and is your mobile phone damaging your finger? Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
We're wandering into the weird world of spiders! We'll be looking at spiders that can fly using little silk parachutes and the grisly and gruesome mating habits of black widow spiders. Plus in the news, as UK cases surge, should Covid precautions move to Plan B; how does raw sewage affect our waterways; and is your mobile phone damaging your finger? Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Francesca Day (comedian who has been on VH1 as well as ESPN) Joins Shannon Lee and Caitlin Ruppert this week to recap Season 3, Episode 7 of Love After Lockup “Menace to Society”! Lacy doesn’t have enough drama in her life so she decides to tell her dad and the world that John might be Marlows father, Josh refuses to have Cheryl help him pay restitution because he’s an independent man all except the money she was working two jobs to give him but other than that tots independent, Glorietta reenacts a scene from Up but instead of a house we watch her sanity float away, Andrea find out the shocking information that her felon boyfriend has lied to her, Lizzy and Daniels mom have a blow out fight which results in a hug and what might be the biggest dig on the Catholic religion since The Child Victims Act, And Vince lies to his Gran right in front of Amber which she immediately calls him out for, just kidding she doesn’t say anything and instead complains to her friend. That and much more! Follow the whole show on Instagram! @OhFrancescaDay, @ShannonLee6982, @CaitlinRuppert, @PodAfterLockup
Do astronauts get WiFi in space? What is the speed of gravity? Why is there always room for dessert? Giles Yeo, Anne-Laura Van Harmelen, Richard Hollingham and Francesca Day gather round the microphones to answer your need-to-know questions about space, food and mental health. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Do astronauts get WiFi in space? What is the speed of gravity? Why is there always room for dessert? Giles Yeo, Anne-Laura Van Harmelen, Richard Hollingham and Francesca Day gather round the microphones to answer your need-to-know questions about space, food and mental health. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
What is dj vu? Why do I get angry when I'm hungry? Why do I remember every Disney lyric, but can't remember how to set my oven? Materials physicist Jess Wade, neuroscientist Philipe Bujold, animal behaviour expert Eleanor Drinkwater, and physicist Francesca Day join Chris Smith, to answer a brilliant barrage of scientific questions... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
What is dj vu? Why do I get angry when I'm hungry? Why do I remember every Disney lyric, but can't remember how to set my oven? Materials physicist Jess Wade, neuroscientist Philipe Bujold, animal behaviour expert Eleanor Drinkwater, and physicist Francesca Day join Chris Smith, to answer a brilliant barrage of scientific questions... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
An international episode this week, as cheese makers in France are outraged over new packaging rules, and religious people in Egypt are mad that one of their most renowned religious icons appears in an ad for chicken. Francesca Day drops in to assist with rulings this week.
Never before has there been so much estrogen in the One Classy Podcast studio. Jennifer Salzman and Francesca Day trot their pretty asses in to talk about Israel, millenials, and the WNBA. Listen here, or download it on iTunes. Follow Jen and Fran on Twitter @JSalzy and @ohfrancescaday
What can space teach us about the laws of physics? Space is huge and complicated. This is a challenge, but also gives us the ultimate physics lab. Francesca Day explores this further. Light from the beginning of the universe is hidden in the night sky. In space we can see physics at much higher energies and over much larger distances than we could ever manage on Earth. Space is also a great place to look for new particles – it produces and accelerates them for us and then drops them right on our heads. I will talk about how we can use space to discover new physics and new particles.
What can space teach us about the laws of physics? Space is huge and complicated. This is a challenge, but also gives us the ultimate physics lab. Francesca Day explores this further. Light from the beginning of the universe is hidden in the night sky. In space we can see physics at much higher energies and over much larger distances than we could ever manage on Earth. Space is also a great place to look for new particles – it produces and accelerates them for us and then drops them right on our heads. I will talk about how we can use space to discover new physics and new particles.