So after reading the comment that Samuel Johnson left me stating that these facts were incorrect i decided to look into them further. I copied and pasted these fun beer facts so there was a big chance that they were false here is what i found on these so called facts:

About 4000 years ago, it was the accepted practice in Babylonia that for a month after the wedding, the bride’s father would supply his son-in-law with all the mead he could drink. Mead is a honey beer, and because their calender was lunar based, this period was called the “honey month” or what we know to day as the “Honey moon”

I did not find much on the origin of “Honey Moon” but I will keep looking and will update the post.

—————————————————–

Before invention of the thermometer, brewers used to check the temperature by dipping their thumb, to find whether appropriate for adding Yeast. Too hot, the yeast would die. This is where we get the phrase ” The Rule of the Thumb”

The earliest citation of “The Rule of the Thumb” comes from Sir William Hope’s The Compleat Fencing-Master, second edition, 1692, page 157: “What he doth, he doth by rule of thumb, and not by art.” The term is thought to originate with wood workers who used the length of their thumbs rather than rulers for measuring things. Making this fact FALSE.

————————————————–

In English pubs, ale is ordered by pints and quarts. So in old England, when customers got unruly, the bartender used to yell at themto mind their own pints and quarts and settle down. From where we get “mind your own P’s and Q’s”.

With this fact there was a lot of results such as: a dancing-master’s instruction to “mind your pieds et queues [i.e. feet and pigtails]” and a school-teacher’s encouragement to pupils who are learning to write. I find this fact to be FALSE

——————————————————

After consuming a vibrant brew called Aul or Ale, the Vikings would go fearlessly to the battlefield, without their armour, or even their shirts. The “Berserk” means “bear shirt” in norse, and eventually to the meaning of wild battles.

I did not find anything about Vikings and Ale but I will keep looking and will update the post.

—————————————————–

Way down in 1740, the Admiral Vernon of the British fleet decided to water down the navy’s rum, which naturally, the sailors weren’t pleased with. They nicknamed the Admiral Old Grog, after the still stiff grogram coats he used to wear. The term grog soon began to mean the watered down drink itself. When you are drunk on this this grog, you are “groggy”, a word still in use.

This is directly out of a wikipedia search: His enduring claim to fame was his 1740 order that his sailors’ rum should be diluted with water. The rest of the Royal Navy rapidly followed his lead, supposedly calling the new drink “grog” after Vernon’s nickname “Old Grog”. This nickname has been attributed to his habitual wearing of a grogram coat. Making this fact TRUE.

————————————————–

Long ago in England, pub frequenters had a whistle baked into the rim of their beer mugs or ceremic/glass cups. The whistle was used to order services. Thus we get the phrase, “wet your whistle”.

As far as i know a cup such as this does not exist. I could not find any picture anywhere all I found was that “whistle” has been used as a slang term for the throat. So i think this fact is FALSE.