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Barbara Blackburn is the fastest typist on record, at 150 words per minute for 50 minutes.
I'm thinking maybe I am... I can type 115 words per minute and I'm 10
As of now, the fastest typing speed ever recorded is 216 words per minute (wpm), achieved by Stella Pajunas-Garnand in 1946. However, it's important to note that the average typing speed for most people is typically around 40 words per minute.
A rapidly ringing bell every minute signals a vessel at anchor.
The American 180 was a submachinegun in caliber .22LR that fired 1200 rounds per minute. If not the highest, has to be in the top 10.
The world's fastest reader is Howard Berg, who made it into the Guinness Book of World Records for reading at 25,000 words per minute. This was before Guinness sent out judges to witness the feats. This record is what Berg claimed he could do but was never verified by a Guinness judge.
If you wish to get in contact with Guinness World Records, the best way to do so is via their website.
From Guinness World Book of Records, there are no records for raisins yet. This also goes for anything online.
The world record for the most jumping jacks in one minute, according to the 2009 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records, is 96.
The world record for the most burps in a minute for a child is currently not officially recognized by Guinness World Records.
According to "The Guinness Book of Records" that I read, the person with the official "loudest clap in the world" is a schoolgirl from Harrogate in England called Martha Gibson. Her clap was measured at an amazing 73db at a distance of 2.5 metres in the open air.
Alejandro Sanz earned a spot in the Guinness Book of World Records for having the most Latin Grammys won by a male artist. As of 2021, he has received a total of 24 Latin Grammys throughout his musical career.
In 2008, The Registry of Official World Records declared Jayen Varma the Fastest Bass Guitar Player. Varma can play 324 beats per minute.
The most jelly babies eaten in a minute is 36, achieved by Andre Ortolf (Germany) on the set of a Guinness World Records television show in Cologne, Germany, on 4 September 2014.
In part that would depend on the mode of transportation and the longitude and lattitudes used. If you are at the North or South Pole you can simply run around the Pole twice clockwise and twice counterclockwise and claim to have run around the earth twice in each direction in less then a minute. That sets up a whole new set of World Records like: * Fastest person to run around the World East to West. * Fastest person to run around the World backwards. * Fastest person to duckwalk around the World. * Fastest person to walk around the World on their hands. * Youngest child to crawl around the World in less then a minute. A whole new Olympiad and a new chapter in the Guinness Book of Records will need to be created.
Some of the baton twirling world records include the fastest multiple baton trick by an individual, most baton twirls in one minute, and longest time spinning a baton on one hand. These records are recognized by organizations such as the World Baton Twirling Federation and Guinness World Records.
The record I know of which is in the Guinness Book of World Records, is who can stitch the most stitches in a minute. Therefore becoming the Worlds Fastest Crocheter. There is a similar title for the worlds fastest knitter, also.Right now, according to the information I have found, the current record is held by Lisa Gentry, and her record is 5,113 stitches in 30 minutes, which averages out to about three stitches per second, or 170 stitches/minute. This record was made on 25 June 2005.From my research, it appears that there is another Guinness World Record in crocheting--the world's longest chain--done using a crochet chain stitch. That was recorded on 14 July 1986, when Ria van der Honing submitted a 38 mile-long chain done in a crochet chain stitch.I believe that I might have found a woman who has sent a 130km (87 miles) of a hand "crocheted" chain stitch. I don't read/speak French, so I'm having to go with Google Translation of the page. I believe that she sent it to Guinness around January 2009--but I'm only guessing at the date. (I have attached a video she made of her process/progress)