T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
795.1 | | SELL3::JOHNSTON | bord failte | Mon Sep 18 1989 16:28 | 1 |
| the surgeon is the boy's mother
|
795.2 | | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Mon Sep 18 1989 17:38 | 44 |
| The first time I heard this was in the early 70's on All in the Family.
Gloria heard it from one of her Activist friends and stumped her family
and friends with it throughout the whole show.
A better riddle is this (and it is sexless):
Two persons are in the middle of a desert. The person with the full
backpack is dead. The person with the empty backpack is alive.
There can be enough information here to surmise what occurred.
The dead person with the full backpack is someone whose parachute did not open.
Try that on your friends.
Mark
|
795.3 | Have we changed? | CARTUN::WALKER | | Mon Sep 18 1989 18:10 | 7 |
| I remember when the basenote riddle *was* hard to figure out. You
could stump all kinds of people with it.
It would be interesting to try it again--maybe I'll experiment. I'll
bet people get it faster now.
Briana
|
795.4 | | LOWLIF::HUXTABLE | Who enters the dance must dance. | Tue Sep 19 1989 11:05 | 12 |
| re .0, equivalent riddle:
Two Red Indians are walking down the road together. One of
them is the father of the other one's son. How can this be?
Same answer, of course. The other Red Indian (I think the
terminology was used to distinguish them as American Indians,
rather than sub-continental Indians) was a woman, the child's
mother.
-- Linda
|
795.5 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Tue Sep 19 1989 17:49 | 4 |
| I don't suppose it would be in keeping with the spirit of the joke to
answer, "Artificial insemination," would it... ;-)
-b
|
795.6 | another | RUTLND::KUPTON | You can't get there from here | Thu Sep 21 1989 13:50 | 39 |
| I remember a lot of those brain teasers from my old school daze.
How far can a black and white spotted dog run into the woods????
Half way. Then it starts running out of the woods
Ken
|
795.7 | A Fun Test | RUTLND::KUPTON | You can't get there from here | Thu Sep 21 1989 14:01 | 67 |
|
If you find a few minutes.......
This test does not measure your intelligence, your fluency with words, or
your mathematical knowledge. It will however, give you some guage of your
menatl creativity and flexibility. In the three years since the test was
developed, few people could solve the netire test on the first try. Many
will get an answer long after they have given up or put the test away.
INSTRUCTIONS: Each question below contains the first letter of the words that
will complete the answer. Find the missing words.
EXAMPLE: 16 O. in a P. ANSWER: 16 Ounces in a Pound
1. 26 L. of the A. _________________________________________________
2. 7 W. of the A. W. _________________________________________________
3. 1001 A. N. _________________________________________________
4. 12 S. of the Z. _________________________________________________
5. 54 C. in a D.(with J) _________________________________________________
6. 9 P. in the S. S. _________________________________________________
7. 88 K. on a P. _________________________________________________
8. 13 S. on the A. F. _________________________________________________
9. 32 D. F. at which W. F. _______________________________________________
10. 18 H. on a G. C. _________________________________________________
11. 90 D. in a R. A. _________________________________________________
12. 200 D. for a P.G. in M. ________________________________________________
13. 8 S. on a S. S. _________________________________________________
14. 3 B. M. (S.H.T.R.) _________________________________________________
15. 4 Q. in a G. _________________________________________________
16. 24 H. in a D. _________________________________________________
17. 1 W. on a U. _________________________________________________
18. 5 D. in a Z. C. _________________________________________________
19. 57 H. V. _________________________________________________
20. 11 P. on a F. T. _________________________________________________
21. 1000 W. that a P. is W. _________________________________________________
22. 29 D. in F. in a L. Y. ________________________________________________
23. 64 S. on a C. _________________________________________________
24. 40 D. and N. of the G. F. _____________________________________________
25. 9 N. in a S. S. N. _________________________________________________
26. 60 S. in a M. _________________________________________________
|
795.8 | The answer to -.7 | JAIMES::GODIN | This is the only world we have | Fri Sep 22 1989 12:37 | 32 |
| re. -.7
1. 26 L of the A = 26 letters fo the alphabet
2. 7 W of the A W = 7 wonders of the ancient world
3. 1001 A N = 1001 Arabian nights
4. 12 S of the Z = 12 signs of the zodiac
5. 54 C in a D (with J) = 54 cards in a deck (with Jokers)
6. 9 P in the S S = 9 planets in the solar system
7. 88 K on a P = 88 keys on a piano
8. 13 S on the A F = 13 stripes on the American flag
9. 32 D F at which W F = 32 degrees Farenheit at which water freezes
10. 18 H on a G C = 18 hols on a golf course
11. 90 D in a R A = 90 degrees in a right angle
12. 200 D for a P G in M = 200 dollars for a Pass Go in Monopoly
13. 8 S on a S S = 8 sides on a stop sign
14. 3 B M (S H T R) = 3 blind mice (see how they run)
15. 4 Q in a G = 4 quarts in a gallon
16. 24 H in a D = 24 hours in a day
17. 1 W on a U = 1 wheel on a unicycle
18. 5 D in a Z C = 5 digits in a zip code
19. 57 H V = 57 Heinz varieties
20. 11 P on a F T = 11 players on a football team
21. 1000 W that a P is W = 1000 words that a picture is worth
22. 29 D in F in a L Y = 29 days in February in a leap year
23. 64 S on a C = 64 squares on a checkerboard
24. 40 D and N of the G F = 40 days and nights of the great flood
25. 9 N in a S S N = 9 numbers in a social security number
26. 60 S in a M = 60 seconds in a minute
Thanks for help from Ron, Ellie, and Susan.
Karen
|
795.9 | This one didn't help my statistics grade | WONDER::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri Sep 22 1989 14:21 | 20 |
| I remember this question and my answer in my college statistics
class. The professor called on me because he thought I was dozing
off (I was, or I wouldn't of had the nerve to answer it as I did).
Q. There are 10 people in a room, 5 men and 5 women; 6 of these people
are doctors. What is the one assumption that can be made?
Expected A. That at least one of the women is a doctor.
My A. That at least one of the men is a doctor.
My answer really flustered him; first he said it was wrong, then
the other female in the class wanted to know why my answer was
wrong, then he agreed that my assumption could be right (but not
practical) and that there must actually be two assumptions that you
could make so that the book that he read the question out of was
actually wrong. Then he let us out of class early. He never called
on me again, that semester or the next. (I should point out that this
was in the early 1970s.)
Deb
|
795.10 | The answer need not take sides... | STAR::BECK | The question is - 2B or D4? | Fri Sep 22 1989 17:25 | 4 |
| > Q. There are 10 people in a room, 5 men and 5 women; 6 of these people
> are doctors. What is the one assumption that can be made?
A. That all the doctors are not of the same gender.
|
795.11 | Friday-type answer | HANDY::MALLETT | Barking Spider Industries | Fri Sep 22 1989 17:32 | 6 |
| � Q. There are 10 people in a room, 5 men and 5 women; 6 of these people
� are doctors. What is the one assumption that can be made?
A. Four people are about to get whopping bills. . .
Steve
|
795.12 | Rat-hole alert | LOWLIF::HUXTABLE | Who enters the dance must dance. | Fri Sep 22 1989 18:04 | 13 |
| re .7
"18. 5 D. in a Z. C."
I've just done a year's time, er, that is, just finished a
12-month residency at the US Postal Service. As far as
they're concerned, some zips have three digits (!), some have
five, and some have nine. It depends on how finely you're
sorting. And there are other situations where they consider
*all* zips to be nine-digit zips, and if not all the digits
are written, the software puts enough zeros at the end.
-- Linda
|
795.13 | Rat hole plug | SSGBPM::KENAH | Haunted by demons who stole my soul | Fri Sep 22 1989 18:16 | 6 |
| re -1:
The puzzle came from Games magazine; it's been around for quite
a while -- in fact, it pre-dates nine digit ZIP codes.
andrew
|
795.14 | Easy really...! | SUBURB::HOLLOWAYF | If only I could.... | Thu Sep 28 1989 12:45 | 39 |
| Every morning a man walks into the office where he works, walks
into the lift and presses the button for the 15th floor.
On reaching the 15th floor he walks out of the lift and proceeds
to walk up 10 flights of stairs to the 25th floor on which he works.
On completion of his working day he walks in to the lift on the 25th
floor and travels all the way to the ground.
Why does he get out on the 15th floor and walk up the final 10 flight
of stairs?
(the lift does go all the way to the 25th)
ANS:: He is too short to reach the button for the 25th floor!!
|
795.15 | And another one... | SUBURB::HOLLOWAYF | If only I could.... | Thu Sep 28 1989 12:59 | 30 |
| A man is building a house, each of the four walls has a southern
exposure.
A bear walks past,
What colour is the bear?
ANS:: WHITE, 'cos if all the walls have a southern exposure then
the house is being built on the north pole, so it must be a POLAR
bear!
|
795.16 | Who started me off anyway... | SUBURB::HOLLOWAYF | If only I could.... | Thu Sep 28 1989 13:04 | 28 |
| You walk in to a dark and dingy room, inside you can just make out
some articles on a table, these consist of an oil lamp, some candles
some matches amd some firewood.
Which of these would you light first?
ANS:: The matches, how else will you light any of the others!
|
795.17 | I think this is the last one.. | SUBURB::HOLLOWAYF | If only I could.... | Thu Sep 28 1989 13:10 | 31 |
| You drive a bus through the town, at the first stop 12 passengers
get on, at the second stop 3 get on and 7 get off, at the third
stop 17 get on and 2 get off, at the forth stop 9 get on and 5 get
off, at the fifth stop 13 get on and 8 get off and at the final
stop before the bus depot 4 get off.
What is the bus drivers name?
ANS:: What ever your name is - read the first word of the riddle
again, it clearly says YOU drive a bus....
|
795.18 | yet more | UNTADI::SAVILLE | Still Kicking | Thu Sep 28 1989 13:53 | 50 |
|
Anthony and Cleopatra are lying dead in a pool of water surrounded by
fragments of broken glass.
How did they die ?
Someone broke their goldfish bowl.
ANS:: What ever your name is - read the first word of the riddle
again, it clearly says YOU drive a bus....
|
795.19 | Nonsense riddle - read at YOUR OWN RISK! | NZOV01::MCKENZIE | All the while,The Dragon Slept | Thu Sep 28 1989 18:16 | 23 |
| This is a nonsense riddle:
There is a man locked in a prison cell. There is no window in the
cell and the cell is on the ground floor, in the far corner of the
prison. He cannot get through the door since it is locked and guarded
heavily.
The room has only a small table...
How does he escape from the cell?
1/ He bangs his head on the wall until it is sore
2/ He uses the saw to cut the table in half
3/ Two halves make a whole
4/ he puts the hole against the far wall and crawls through it.
HEY - I SAID IT WAS A NONSENSE RIDDLE! ;^)
|
795.20 | Pun Alert!! Pun Alert!! Run away, run away!! (#1 of 2 :-) | RANGER::KALIKOW | Too many NOTES! (as in Amadeus:-) | Fri Mar 16 1990 22:38 | 33 |
| What does an insomniac, agnostic, dyslexic person do??
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
Lies awake all night wondering whether there is a dog.
|
795.21 | Pun Alert!! Pun Alert!! Run away, run away!! (#2 of 2 :-) | RANGER::KALIKOW | Too many NOTES! (as in Amadeus:-) | Fri Mar 16 1990 22:39 | 32 |
| What do you get when you roll a hand grenade across the kitchen floor?
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
:-)
Linoleum Blown-apart
|
795.22 | add entry visa::Joyoflex | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Sat Mar 17 1990 00:09 | 6 |
| in re .20 and .21
if you really enjoy puns try the joyoflex confernce.
Bonnie J
=wn= comod
|