Engineering Funny Magnets
Description: Engineers are overly complex just to be complex, Perfect for the engineers in your life including you, Im not arguing Im just explaining why Im right. Engineer graduates, engineering students, senior engineers, Identity formation engineers, nerdy engineers, engineers receiving and working on patents, engineering faculty and teachers, mechanical structural engineering, aerospace engineers.
Mechanical Engineering What Part Of Dont You Understand T-Shirt Magnet
by Rosemarie Guieb - Gifts Decor
$4.50
Description: Are you or your friend an Engineer? Maybe you are an Engineering Student with a sense of humor. "I'm not Arguing I'm just explaining why i'm Right" - is a funny gift for Electrical or Mechanical engineer, Biomedical or Aerospace engineer, Civil, Structural, Software or Computer engineer. This Engineer design "I'm Not Arguing" perfect for students to wear to class, or for Engineers to while working.
Description: Makes a great gift including Christmas and Birthday. Engineers are overly complex just to be complex, Perfect for the engineers in your life including you, Im not arguing Im just explaining why Im right. Engineer graduates, engineering students, senior engineers, Identity formation engineers, nerdy engineers, engineers receiving and working on patents, engineering faculty and teachers, mechanical structural engineering, aerospace engineers.
Description: Perfect gift for aerospace engineer, engineering student or aerospace engineering graduate !
Aerospace Engineer - It's not rocket science It's aerospace engineering Magnet
by kc_happy_shop111
$4.50
Description: Reddy Kilowatt is a fictional character that acted as spokesman for electricity generation in the United States for over 70 years. He is drawn as a stick figure whose body, limbs, and hair are made of stylized lightning-bolts and whose bulbous head has a light bulb for a nose and wall outlets for ears. His primary purpose was to put a friendly face on the newfangled electrical systems that were commonplace in the cities in the 1920s, but rural areas remained chronically underserved as people had many misconceptions about electricity.