>Your cunt
>What are some notable inventions from your cunt?
Spain
>space suit (1935)
>submarine
>autogyro (proto-helicopter)
>stapler, mop
>electronic calculator
>needle
>lollipop / Chupa chups (candy on a stick)
>6-string guitar
>Your cunt
>What are some notable inventions from your cunt?
Spain
>space suit (1935)
>submarine
>autogyro (proto-helicopter)
>stapler, mop
>electronic calculator
>needle
>lollipop / Chupa chups (candy on a stick)
>6-string guitar
Straya
Wi-fi
Penicillin
Electric drill
Spray on skin
Black box
Racecam
Ultrasound scanner
Permaculture
Cochlear implant
I doubt any of those are true
Portugal
Stop-less Tollbooths (Via Verde)
Universal Bank ATMs (you can pay bills and buy tickets and not pay bullshit inter-bank fees)
Pastéis de Bacalhau
Transatlantic Slave Trade
The Lobotomy
The Boat (1514)
Brazil
mexico
>tacos
> siesta
> mariachis
>burritos
>hard party
>narcos
>corn
>marihuana
holography
plasma tv
nukes
trump that bitches.
Color televisión (debatable)
Contraceptives
Skyscraper
Gramophone
Airplane
Cellphone
Assembly line
Cotton gin
Light bulb
Film
Potato chip
Machine gun
Transistor
Bifocal
Suspension bridge
Lint roller
Chile
>
I thought Jamaica invented marajuana.
didnt england make the first sub?
>Airplanes
>Electric lightbulb
>Nuclear bomb and submarine
>Machine gun
>First laser
>Modern computer
>Microwave
>Cannabis is indigenous to Central and South Asia,[165] and its use for fabric and rope dates back to the Neolithic age in China and Japan.[166][167] It is unclear when cannabis first became known for its psychoactive properties; some scholars suggest that the ancient Indian drug soma, mentioned in the Vedas, was cannabis, although this theory is disputed.[168]
>Cannabis was also known to the ancient Assyrians, who discovered its psychoactive properties through the Aryans.[169] Using it in some religious ceremonies, they called it qunubu (meaning "way to produce smoke"), a probable origin of the modern word "cannabis".[170] The Aryans also introduced cannabis to the Scythians, Thracians and Dacians, whose shamans (the kapnobatai—"those who walk on smoke/clouds") burned cannabis flowers to induce trance.[171]
Suspension bridges were a thing before America just made the modern suspension bridges.
>ATM
>bacalhau cake
based portugal :3
youtube.com
>mexico
>siesta
ummm, no sweetie
>france
>cinema
>photograophy
>automobile
>hot air balloon
>braille
>vaccine
>croissant
>metric system
>hot air balloon
Maybe not.
pt.wikipedia.org
Flag
Literally the modern world as we know it.
>Mexico
>Color TV
>Next day pill contraceptive
>Indelible Ink
Of the top of my head
Not inventions but our firsts
>Air to surface warfare
>Functional automatic rifle
Steam engine
Computer
Carbon fibre
Telephone
Turbines
TV
Tank
Stainless steel
Photographs
Reflecting telescope
Im pretty sure credit for the first automobile goes to Germany.
Passarola é o projeto de um aeróstato supostamente construído entre 1709 e 1720
>supostamente
>get your facts straight, João.
Pretty sure vaccines were first used in Turkey
I did say "maybe". No bully, Piérre.
britannica.com
Thank you Britannica.
And yes it was steam-powered. Yesterday it was thermal, And now it is electric.
pizza oven :3
>color tv
Stop spreading this lie, is embarrassing.
Camarena's system wasn't the first nor the most used.
And the steam engine was used in Spain for mining operations one century before you "invented it" (and it was also used by ancient greeks for gimick uses), the thing is, you improved it and gave it a wider use, this happens with many of the inventions listed by many people, that parallel inventions happened in other countries sometimes around the same era but maybe didn't go further, that's why so many conflicts appear in regards to the authorship of many inventions which are defined ultimately by who has more power over the global sociocultural narrative.
>en.wikipedia.org
>en.wikipedia.org
>The use of boiling water to produce mechanical motion goes back over 2000 years, but early devices were not practical. The Spanish inventor Jerónimo de Ayanz y Beaumont obtained a patent for a rudimentary steam-powered water pump in 1606.[3] In 1698 Thomas Savery patented a steam pump that used steam in direct contact with the water being pumped. Savery's steam pump used condensing steam to create a vacuum and draw water into a chamber, and then applied pressurized steam to further pump the water.
The jew oven is just as important.