wibbly wobblies are small children's toys that have a rounded bottom and therefore they wobble
We experience seasons because the Earth's tilt wobbles.
The seasons are different due to a number of factors: The orbital position (Earth's orbit is an ellipse - not a circle), it's rotation (it 'wobbles' on it's axis) and the influence of the moon on the tides all play a part in the changing seasons.
It's not.On December 21, the South Pole is tilted as far as it can be -- 23-1/2 degrees above the horizon -- away from the Sun.This phenomenon is because the Earth tilts both poles toward and away from the sun -- alternatively -- as it wobbles its way through the Universe.
It is a slang pronunciation for love. Ex: "I wub you." It could also be a reference to the sound of a bass wobble. Bass wobbles are distorted low frequency sounds primarily used in Dubstep.
This can be answered in the teachings of the medicine wheel. No one thing is greater than another. All things fit on the wheel of life....if one thing on the wheel of life is taken away then the wheel wobbles and all life and things suffer.
A wobbler could be a person or a thing that wobbles or a fishing lure that does not spin but wobbles.
No it doesn't it wobbles.
a jellycopter (helicopter)
Plural in-equilibrium
They have discovered planets and other large bodies in alien star systems by measuring stellar wobbles.
Earth's axis wobbles.
by having sexsual love
Worries and Wobbles - 1917 was released on: USA: 13 August 1917 USA: 7 June 1920 (re-release)
the Earth's axis always wobbles but it does so seasonally and when it does it changes seasons in certian locations. when the axis wobbles, whatever location you are in will either get tilted towards the Sun or get tilted away from the Sun, which changes the season with the help of the revolution of the Earth around the Sun
your bearings maybe gone.
center of mass
The Earth spins like a top around its own axis. The Earth orbits the Sun. The Sun has its own proper motion through the Milky Way galaxy, and orbits the center of the galaxy every 220 million years or so. The Milky Way galaxy itself is moving, but because we don't have any fixed point of reference in the universe, we don't know in what direction.