A character from the Monty Pithon's "The Life Of Brian"
Biggus Banguss springs to mind. However, the ancient Romans had no concept of the "Big Bang" and are unlikely to have coined a word for it. Caboomus Magni? Magna Boomba? Craccus Major! The term Big Bang was coined by opponents of the theory, and used mockingly at first. You are likely today to see references to 'inflation' or 'expansion' in discussions of the big bang. Be on the look-out; they might be references to the big bang itself.
no, but rumors have been going around about that and she has to tell the ppl to get the facts straight about that, like somebody started a rumor that she died from a heart attach, but she told them she did not die and she is getting really pissed off for them starting rumors
The tongue is effectively one big muscle but it has got different sets of firbres which are often seen as separate muscles; the two (Superior and Inferior) Longitudonal fibres, the Transverse fibres and the Vertical fibres. The Genioglossus is never agreed upon whether it is part of the tongue or not but it sits directly underneath it at any rate. Anything (muslces, vessels or nerves) that are related to the tongue have the term Glossus in some form in their name. This is the old latin name for the tongue but nowadays you will not often hear it as just calling it the tonue is far more prevelant.