As I said before, if it's'stranger than fiction', for example, the story of the man who survived a plane crash in the middle of a jungle and then managed to live there for months using his wits. It's like something out of an adventure novel but it's real.
I'm not sure if 'steanger' is a correct word. If you mean'stranger than fiction', it generally means something is more unusual or unexpected than what is typically found in fictional stories.
The Voynich Manuscript is a great example. It's a very old, hand - written book filled with strange illustrations and text that no one has been able to fully decipher yet. The origin, purpose, and meaning of this manuscript are all a mystery. It's much stranger than most fictional mysteries you'd read about in a novel.
Sure. The story of the Voynich Manuscript. It's a mysterious book filled with strange illustrations and an undeciphered writing system. No one knows who wrote it, when, or what it means. It's like something out of a mystery novel, but it's a real, existing object.
The placebo effect can be considered weirder than fiction. People can experience real physical changes just because they believe they are taking a medicine, even if it's just a sugar pill. In fiction, we often need some magical or scientific - sounding explanations for things like this, but in reality, it just happens without any such obvious reasons, which makes it very strange compared to fictional concepts.
Sure. True love between two people in real life is greater than fiction. In fiction, love stories are often crafted with certain plot devices, but in real life, the bond between two individuals can be so deep, complex, and full of real emotions that it's far more profound than any fictional love story.
A spoon made from a meteorite. It's so strange because it's not your everyday material for a spoon, and it has an otherworldly origin, much stranger than anything you'd find in most fictional stories about spoons.
The phenomenon of the dancing plague in the Middle Ages. People in a town started dancing uncontrollably for days, some even to the point of exhaustion or death. There's no clear scientific explanation for it even today, and it's far stranger than most fictional stories about mass hysteria.
One example could be a love that occurs between two people who have a significant age gap and are from different generations. In fiction, such relationships are sometimes explored but often in a more predictable way. However, in real life, if their love story involves unique circumstances like they met through an unusual event, like they were both lost in a remote forest and their survival experience brought them together. Their love that grows from such an extraordinary situation could be considered 'love you stranger than fiction'.
Sure. The logic of a bottle's capacity. If a bottle is labeled as 500ml, that's a real, measurable fact. Fiction can be full of exaggerations and unproven ideas, but the capacity of a bottle is based on precise measurements, so it's a form of 'bottle logic' that's stronger than fiction.
Black holes are an example. In science fiction, we often have concepts of powerful, mysterious objects in space. But the reality of black holes, where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape, is truly stranger. Their existence bends our understanding of space and time in ways that are extremely difficult to comprehend, and they are very much a real - life phenomenon.