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[b][c=#BF0080]The egg.[/c][/b]
Carver · 31-35, F
Scientifically speaking, the egg would have to have come first.
Goralski · 51-55, M
@Carver: couldn't have. ..no fertilization process
Carver · 31-35, F
@Goralski: Well, the explanation behind the answer is a bit more complicated but the egg would indeed had to have come first. Neil deGrasse's take on the subject says it best: https://twitter.com/neiltyson/status/296100559423954944
Didn't the egg come first? I'm pretty sure the chicken was an evolved hybrid or something
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randompi · 22-25, F
That's true, but it is interesting to know what others believe the answer to be whether they know or not
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tynamite · 31-35, M
the egg
Neiromatheous · 31-35, M
[image]
ToriTalking · 18-21, F
Neither. There is a chicken in every egg and there are eggs in every chicken. You have to have both or you can't have either
UserNameSW · 46-50, M
Dino eggs came much sooner than chickens
Arthur14 · 26-30, M
The egg... Of the dinosaurs!!
LoveChild · 26-30, F
chegging...chegging...nope
Goralski · 51-55, M
Mcnugget
Alabamians
Dolimyte · 41-45, M
Egg