No because you will just throw up because a stamp taste is nasty
~Roxy
Licking an envelope is 1/10 of a calorie, and also licking a stamp is 1/10 of a calorie.
No one should answer this because you shouldn't lick a stamp in the first place! ___ First there is nothing wrong with licking the back of a stamp. You won't pick up any diseases from doing this. According to Royal Mail (British Post Office) the average British stamp has 5.9 calories, while the larger stamps can have up to 14 calories. But this doesn't take into account you aren't ingesting the stamp, simply moistening the gum. So I would say the amount you digest is minuscule.
If you don't use the calories from the twizzlers then yes. In order to gain weight you have to receive more calories from food than you use during the day. Theoretically any food could make you gain weight.
No, you're not "burning" any muscles. What you're doing is burning calories, and you need to be consuming considerably more calories than you burn to gain muscle. It is very difficult to lose fat and gain muscle at the same time.
Fast food is typically very high in calories (the average fast food meal normally has about 1,000 calories), and any calories a person doesn't burn off ends up leading to weight gain. If they exercised the calories off, then it wouldn't make them gain weight. But most people normally don't burn all the calories they ate at that meal. However, fast food every once in a while is fine, and won't make you gain.
Consuming calories in excess or your ability to burn them off causes weight gain, yes. In fact, excess calories are exactly what makes you fat. It is not carbs or fat or any thing else, it is all a matter of how many calories you take in vs, how many you burn off.
No, 800 calories is dangerously low and is still far below your normal caloric needs; calorie intake must be in excess of your daily requirements to gain any weight.
If you are in calorie balance, that is, your calories eaten equal calories burned, you won't gain any weight at all. 3,500 calories equals roughly one pound of fat. Therefore, if you create a calorie imbalance of eating 3,500 calories more than you burn each week, you will gain about a pound of fat each week. So, it happens pretty quickly. If you're talking about adding muscle, this happens at a slower rate.
Sure, but it would be largely unmeasurable until you re-entered a gravity well. Eat more calories than you burn in any environment and you will gain mass.
There are no "fattening foods" so to speak. Excess calories from any food, healthy or not, can cause weight gain.
No
ANY food can make you gain weight if you eat more calories than you burn off. Also I don't think your digestive tract will thank you for consuming raw rice...