Amazing facts on cleaniness.
Answers
Answer:
Here is your answers mate
Explanation:
If you clean for two hours, you burn 200 calories. #burncalories #cleaning
70% of dust particles are comprised of dead skin flakes
The average person spends 87% of their time indoors - make cleaning your home a priority
Did you know most people say that their favourite room to clean in their house is the bathroom - what's yours
As well as being tasty on Chips using ketchup on tarnished or corroded brass will help bring back its shine
Running low on antibacterial spray – lemons are a great disinfectant. #cleaningtips
Did you know the average woman cleans for 12, 896 hours in her lifetime vs 6, 448 hours for men!! Unfair or what!
Wash your kitchen sinks regularly as research shows they actually have more germs than the toilet.
Did you know most antibacterial cleaner must be left on surfaces for 30 to 60 seconds before wiping away. Remember that next time you clean your kitchen and bathroom surfaces
Ten facts about dirt and cleanliness you may not have known:
1. People rarely used soap to wash their bodies until the late 19th century. It was usually made from animal fats and ashes and was too harsh for bodies; the gentler alternative, made with olive oil, was too expensive for most people.
2. The accumulated sweat, dirt and oil that a famous athlete or gladiator scraped off himself was sold to their fans in small vials. Roman women reportedly used it as a face cream.
3. Recycling saintly secretions: St. Lutgard’s saliva was believed to heal the sick, as were the crumbs chewed by another medieval saint, St. Colette. A man sent from England to the Netherlands for St. Lidwina’s washing water, to apply to his afflicted leg. The water from St. Eustadiola’s face- and hand-washing cured blindness and other illnesses.
4. Teeth were cleaned in the middle ages and the Renaissance with green hazel twigs and woollen cloths.
5. Austrian peasant men courted by secreting a handkerchief in their armpits during a dance. When it was sufficiently sweaty, they wiped the face of their chosen girl with it – according to folk belief, she would be instantly smitten.
6. 16th century French deodorant: “To cure the goat-like stench of armpits, it is useful to press and rub the skin with a compound of roses.”
7. When John Wesley, the 18th-century founder of Methodism, coined the phrase, “Cleanliness is next to godliness,” he was referring to clean clothes, not bodies.
8. Listerine was invented as a surgical antiseptic and, without changing its formula, morphed over 40 years into an oral antiseptic, astringent and astonishingly successful mouthwash.
9. Kotex sanitary napkins began life as wood-fibre bandages for soldiers in World War One. The battlefield nurses used them as sanitary pads.
10. In 1931, halitosis was cited as grounds for divorce.