Here are some interesting things: - Comparing NaN with anything (even NaN) is always false. - Array.sort can take a comparator function and is usually called by a quicksort-like driver. - Regular expression "constants" can maintain state (like the last thing they matched) - Some versions of javascript allow you to access $0, $1, $2 members on a regex. - null is unlike anything else. It is neither an object, a boolean, a number, a string, nor undefined. It's a bit like an "alternate" undefined. - In the outermost context, 'this' yields the otherwise unnameable [Global] object. - Declaring a variable with 'var', instead of just relying on automatic declaration of the variable gives the runtime a real chance of optimizing access to that variable - the 'with' construct will destroy such optimzations - Variable names can contain Unicode. - JavasScript regular expressions are not actually regular. They are based on Perl's regexs, and it is possible to construct expressions with lookaheads that take a very, very long time to evaluate. - Blocks can be labeled and used as the targets of break. Loops can be labeled and used as the target of continue. - Arrays are not sparse. Setting the 1000th element of an otherwise empty array should fill it with undefined.