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Did you Know
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Learn some fun facts about Singapore!
Did you know...
1. Singapore consists only of one main island and 63 other tiny
islands. Most of these
islands are uninhabited.
2. Singapore is among the 20 smallest countries in the world, with
a total land area of
only 682.7 square kilometres. The USA is about 15,000 times
bigger.
3. Apart from Monaco, Singapore is the most densely populated
country in the world, with
6,430 people per square kilometre.
4. Singapore became the 117th member of the United Nations on 21
September 1965.
5. Symbolism of the National Flag: Red symbolises universal
brotherhood and equality of
man while white signifies purity and virtue. The crescent moon
represents a young
nation on the rise and the five stars signify the ideals of
democracy, peace, progress,
justice and equality.
6. The national flower of Singapore, Vanda Miss Joaquim, was first
discovered in 1893 by
Agnes Joaquim, an Armenian. The orchid is a natural hybrid between
V. teres and V.
hookeriana.
7. The Merlion, a half-fish, half-lion beast, is a fitting symbol
of Singapore. The "Singa" or
lion represents the animal that a Sumatran prince saw which
resembled a lion, and the
fish is a tribute to Singapore's history as "Temasek", the ancient
sea town.
8. Singlish, a Singaporean patois mixing English with the odd
phrase of Chinese, Malay
and even Tamil, has two entries - lah and sinseh - in the online
version of the Oxford
English Dictionary.
9. Although English is the official working language and the most
widely used language in
Singapore, the national anthem 'Majulah Singapura' is actually
sung in Malay.
10. The flying fox, the world's largest bat with a wingspan of up
to 1.5 metres, can be
found on Pulau Ubin, one of the islands off mainland Singapore.
11. Singapore is a stopover point for thousands of migratory birds
travelling the East
Asian Flyway.
12. The world's first night zoo, The Night Safari, is located in
Singapore.
13. Despite being largely urbanised, Singapore is the largest
exporter of ornamental fish
(25% of the world market).
14. The Bukit Timah Nature Reserve in Singapore contains more
species of trees than the
entire North American continent.
15. The highest natural point in Singapore is Bukit Timah Hill,
which is only 164 metres
high (Singapore has a very flat terrain).
16. Buildings in Singapore cannot be higher than 280 metres. There
are presently three
buildings of that height: OUB Centre, UOB Plaza and Republic
Plaza.
17. The world's highest man-made waterfall, standing at 30 metres,
is located at the
Jurong BirdPark.
18. The largest fountain in the world is located in Singapore at
Suntec City. Made of cast
bronze, it cost an estimated US$6 million to build in 1997.
19. The buildings of Suntec City have been built in the shape of a
palm of a hand
symbolising good "feng shui".
20. In 2003, Singapore's Changi Airport won the award for "Best
Airport Worldwide" for the
16th consecutive year from the UK/Europe edition of the Business
Traveller
magazine.
21. The Guinness book record for the longest human domino chain
was set in Singapore
on 30th September 2000. Formed by 9,234 students, it measured
4.2km.
22. The world domino topple record (303,621 men) was set in
Singapore on 18th August
2003 by a 24-year-old woman from China.
23. The record for the biggest ever game of pass-the-parcel was
set in Singapore on 28
February 1998. It involved 3,918 students removing 2,200 wrappers
from a 1.5 x 1.5 x
0.5 m parcel.
24. The record for the most number of people participating in line
dancing was set in
Singapore in May 2002 with 11,967 dancers.
25. The Great Singapore Duck Race, an annual event that raises
funds for charity, set a
new world record in 2002 when more than 123,000 toy ducks took to
the Singapore
River.
26. Russell Lee, a pseudonym for a team of ghost-writers, is the
hottest-selling local
author in Singapore. His 11 volumes of True Singapore Ghost
Stories have sold more
than 600,000 copies to date.
27. The fastest selling book of all time in Singapore is Hello
Chok Tong, Goodbye Kuan
Yew: The Untold Story. Written and drawn by political cartoonist
George Nonis, it
sold 40,000 copies in two months.
28. The highest grossing movie of all time in Singapore is
Titanic, raking in S$6.65 million
in 1997.
29. The highest grossing locally made movie of all time is Money
No Enough, raking in
S$6.02 million in 1998.
30. The first Singaporean film to be shown at the Cannes Film
Festival was director Eric
Khoo's 12 Storeys in 1997.
31. British pop violinist Vanessa Mae Nicholson was born in
Singapore and moved to
England when she was four.
32. More Singaporeans are born in the month of October than any
other month of the
year.
33. The first population census taken in 1824 revealed that the
total population was
10,683. The 2000 census showed that the population of Singapore is
4.2 million.
34. Nearly 9 out of 10 Singaporeans live in public housing flats.
35. The most common Chinese surnames in Singapore are Tan, Lim and
Lee.
36. Singapore has more than 3,000 kilometres of roads. Stretched
end to end, they can
cover the distance from Singapore to Hong Kong.
37. 8 in 10 people in Singapore own cell phones. In fact, telecom
companies issue new
numbers at the rate of 30,000 to 40,000 per month.
38. Singapore's best showing in the Olympic Games ever was a
silver medal won by
weightlifter Tan Howe Liang in Rome in 1960.
39. Swimmer Ang Peng Siong was ranked world number one in the 50m
Freestyle in
1982.
40. The Singapore Sling was first served in 1915 at the Long Bar
of the Raffles Hotel. The
ingredients are gin, Cointreau, cherry brandy, Dom Benedictine,
pineapple juice,
Grenadine, Angoustura bitters and limes.
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