Dhrumil's Simple Website

10/25/2059 by: Somebody

Hello, and welcome to Dhrumil's GitHub lesson. If you haven't already, please

This is a pretend article about vegetables. Specifically how long they are and what color they are. There are lots of vegetables in the world and they are of various collllors. They can be white, blue or yellow; but there are no neon vegetables in nature. That is why this article is so important to inform you about types of vegggetables. Once you're done reading, you should be able to identify whether or not what you're eating is a vegetable.

Vegetables on my shopping list.

As you can see in the table above, my shopping list has vegetables of various colors.

First, let's talk about potatoes. Your average large potato is 1.75-2.5 inches in diameter. Of course, there are various types of potatoes, but if you took every single potato of every size, shape and variety, they are roughly that size on average. Addionally, most potatoes have brown skin. Some are white and some are yellow; some are sweet and some are mellow. But potatoes are potatoes and on average they are brown-skinned.

Now let's talk about gym socks. Gym socks are very smelly. So smelly in fact that they make your feet smell bad. actually, I think that it is the other way around. Feet actually imbue the smell into the socks; the socks are not actually the soure of the smell. Did you know that? Go figure!

Now carrots, those are orange. Did you know that carrots actually used to be purple? Yeah, I didn't know that either. But after I read the article I just linked to, I learned it. Then, I knew it! What an interesting fact. I didn't personally unearth that fact, but I linked to it from another website. I also don't unearth carrots; I buy them at the grocery store.

In conclusion, vegetables vary in color, potatoes come in many forms, and carrots have a surprisingly dramatic history. Most importantly, gym socks do not belong in a grocery list. You now have the basic knowledge needed to identify a vegetable in the wild (or at least in the produce aisle).

If you're reading this, you've reached the end of the article and probably lost a few brain cells. Now we, a group of professional newspeople, are going to work on improving it. Kind of like a reverse mad-libs.

This is a demo website