Topic: Your jokes

Please let me start a thread for jokes.

I am sure humour will show its hoary head!
No example here, just a thread titling post

Re: Your jokes

Jewish joke.

A Jewish man took his Passover lunch to eat outside in the park. He sat down on a bench and began eating.

A little while later a blind man came by and sat down next to him.

Feeling neighbourly, the Jewish man passed a sheet of matzo to the blind man.

The blind man ran his fingers over the matzo for a few minutes, looked puzzled, and finally exclaimed, "Who wrote this c**p?"

3 (edited by jackneve 2022-01-22 12:54:58)

Re: Your jokes

I should have explained what matzo is for those not familiar with this delicacy.

Take a sheet of armour plate grade steel 2mm thick, about 15mm square.
Drill 1mm diameter holes in a close grid of 10mm each way.
Heat in furnace until surface bubbles.

If you want it buttered, allow several ounces per sheet, allowing for surface roughness.

Or, buy a packet at your local Jewish deli.

ps: it doesn't break at the perforations, or in neat lines.

Enjoy

Re: Your jokes

jackneve wrote:

Jewish joke.

A Jewish man took his Passover lunch to eat outside in the park. He sat down on a bench and began eating.

A little while later a blind man came by and sat down next to him.

Feeling neighbourly, the Jewish man passed a sheet of matzo to the blind man.

The blind man ran his fingers over the matzo for a few minutes, looked puzzled, and finally exclaimed, "Who wrote this c**p?"

https://punster.me/images/laugh.gif

"I meant," said Ipslore bitterly, "what is there in this world that truly makes living worthwhile?"
Death thought about it.
"Cats," he said eventually. "Cats are nice."
Terry Pratchett, Sourcery

Re: Your jokes

What Japanese sport is associated with the duelling request to select a pistol?




Take-one, do

Re: Your jokes

The rhyming couplet in the first post in this thread
doesn't rhyme but goes peculiar instead
I know this humour may not please most
But at least there's rhyming in this post

7 (edited by jackneve 2022-01-23 13:29:20)

Re: Your jokes

William wrote:

The rhyming couplet in the first post in this thread
doesn't rhyme but goes peculiar instead
I know this humour may not please most
But at least there's rhyming in this post

The first post in this thread was mine, prose text just asking for a jokes thread to be allowed.

If it's that post to which William is referring, and I can't see another,  I don't take it kindly.

I hope you will never find me guilty of trying to pass off such text as an attempt at a rhyming couplet.

You may have noticed I always try to regularise the no of stresses/feet in each line of a couplet, which more than can be said for your comment!

Wrongly seen as rhyme, first post in this thread,
   Rhymes not, William, obvious when read
This humour may not please the most; sublime, 
   But unlike some, these stanzas all do rhyme.
By me, compressed and tortured to be neat,
   At least, contain equality of feet.

Re: Your jokes

There was a young man with a goal
To swallow a lexicon whole
  To make a translation
  For the good of the Nation
That was his uplifting rôle

No names, no pack drill!

Re: Your jokes

https://resources.arcamax.com/newspics/cache/lw600/222/22200/2220067.jpg
Philosophy for Sunday afternoon

10 (edited by William 2022-01-23 20:36:16)

Re: Your jokes

jackneve wrote:

There was a young man with a goal
To swallow a lexicon whole
  To make a translation
  For the good of the Nation
That was his uplifting rôle

No names, no pack drill!

Could you possibly consider changimg 'a translation' to 'some translations' please?

Then 'nation' could be changed to 'nations' because it is about communication through the language barrier.

Your use of the word 'nation' reminds me of the font Gentium

https://software.sil.org/fonts/

where the name means 'for the nations'.

Gentium arose out of an M.Sc. project.

The use of the word 'young' is kind.

I remember my personal project of when I was young.

William

11 (edited by jackneve 2022-01-23 21:08:54)

Re: Your jokes

Could you possibly consider changimg 'a translation' to 'some translations' please?
Then 'nation' could be changed to 'nations' because it is about communication through the language barrier.

No - I  like my limerick as it is.

The use of the word 'young' is kind.

It would have too rude to put "old"

You don't like it - here's a challenge - write your own poem, limerick, what have you - but make it rhyme and scan.

I notice you haven't commented on the previous post. . . .

Anyway, this thread is for jokes, even comic poems.

12 (edited by William 2022-01-23 22:49:22)

Re: Your jokes

jackneve wrote:
William wrote:

The rhyming couplet in the first post in this thread
doesn't rhyme but goes peculiar instead
I know this humour may not please most
But at least there's rhyming in this post

The first post in this thread was mine, prose text just asking for a jokes thread to be allowed.

If it's that post to which William is referring, and I can't see another,  I don't take it kindly.

I hope you will never find me guilty of trying to pass off such text as an attempt at a rhyming couplet.

You may have noticed I always try to regularise the no of stresses/feet in each line of a couplet, which more than can be said for your comment!

Wrongly seen as rhyme, first post in this thread,
   Rhymes not, William, obvious when read
This humour may not please the most; sublime, 
   But unlike some, these stanzas all do rhyme.
By me, compressed and tortured to be neat,
   At least, contain equality of feet.

Hello Jack

I was not trying to be unkind.

I read the first post in this thread and as I started to read it, it seemed like a rhyming couplet but it was not.

And it made me laugh!

I now know that it was not intended as a rhyming couplet but it just sort of, well, humourously jarred that it wasn't as if it were the unexpected punchline of a joke.

So I wrote a poem that bumped strangely as an attempt at humour.

Please note how it bumped at the word 'peculiar'.

The thread is for jokes.

It just seemed funny to me.

William

Re: Your jokes

jackneve wrote:

Please let me start a thread for jokes.

I am sure humour will show its hoary head!
No example here, just a thread titling post

I have just reread it and it is amazingly funny.

Very cleverly done.

William

14 (edited by William 2022-01-23 23:02:56)

Re: Your jokes

Hello Jack,

Here is a limerick in response to your challenge

At his letter the writer surmised
She in France might be surprised
Through the language barrier
By electronic carrier
At the reception end localized

William

Re: Your jokes

Ah, William, that's excellent in several respects. It rhymes, it scans and it nicely conveys the message.

You see what you can do when you're provoked.

Re: Your jokes

Hello Jack

Thank you.

Is this forum using continental time?

It is not yet midnight in the United Kingdom.

William

Re: Your jokes

Travelling to England from Rome
She booked a holiday home
In a woodland chalet
She practised her ballet
And learned to pronounce the word 'some'

Sometimes when writing a song
It's like turning the radio on
With rhyme after rhyme
In double quick time
New music is made before long

William

Re: Your jokes

Travelling to England from Rome
She booked a holiday home
In a woodland chalet
She practised her ballet
And learned to pronounce the word 'some'

I have some issues with this verse, unlike the second. This first  limerick seems to be a collection of phrases cobbled together, with only the middle three bearing any relationship with each other, and none with  the first and last lines. Also Why the word "some" - I work quite hard to find relevant rhymes.

Why not try: "Having tidied her hair with a comb", or even "And practised the dance Sugar Plum"

Re: Your jokes

William wrote:

Is this forum using continental time?

It is not yet midnight in the United Kingdom.

I see GMT here, William. Your post is timestamped 23:56:45.

“Within you, there is a stillness and a sanctuary to which you can retreat at any time and be yourself.”
― Hermann Hesse

Re: Your jokes

Alfred wrote:
William wrote:

Is this forum using continental time?

It is not yet midnight in the United Kingdom.

I see GMT here, William. Your post is timestamped 23:56:45.

Upon further investigation, I’ve found that the Settings section in your profile has a tick in the ‘Daylight saving time’ checkbox. Clear the box, scroll down and press the ‘Update settings’ button to fix the issue.

“Within you, there is a stillness and a sanctuary to which you can retreat at any time and be yourself.”
― Hermann Hesse

Re: Your jokes

Re my first post in this thread:

Please let me start a thread for jokes.
I am sure humour will show its hoary head!
No example here, just a thread titling post

In the light of what you have said, I had another look at it. I now discern some truth in your assumption.

"Thread" and "head" do rhyme.
"Jokes" and "post" almost rhyme.

I could have written
:

Please, let me start a Jokes new thread
For humour with a hoary head
And new cartoons and verses funny
To keep our feelings always sunny

Re: Your jokes

jackneve wrote:

Travelling to England from Rome
She booked a holiday home
In a woodland chalet
She practised her ballet
And learned to pronounce the word 'some'

I have some issues with this verse, unlike the second. This first  limerick seems to be a collection of phrases cobbled together, with only the middle three bearing any relationship with each other, and none with  the first and last lines. Also Why the word "some" - I work quite hard to find relevant rhymes.

Why not try: "Having tidied her hair with a comb", or even "And practised the dance Sugar Plum"

As she is from Rome, English is probably not her native language. So the word 'some' is what is called an eye rhyme, it looks like a rhyme, but is not.

So the limerick illustrates, by ending with an eye rhyme of 'Rome' and 'home', one if the many inconsistencies in the pronunciation of English words.

William

Re: Your jokes

https://i.postimg.cc/zVxmDnPT/271131198-4938008229553973-1788424532322507612-n.jpg
Punny Pete >Scarlett Overkill<

"I meant," said Ipslore bitterly, "what is there in this world that truly makes living worthwhile?"
Death thought about it.
"Cats," he said eventually. "Cats are nice."
Terry Pratchett, Sourcery

Re: Your jokes

https://i.postimg.cc/3kN9r0dq/254308005-4689887281032737-8178842942575227796-n.jpg
Punny Pete ~PUNdora

"I meant," said Ipslore bitterly, "what is there in this world that truly makes living worthwhile?"
Death thought about it.
"Cats," he said eventually. "Cats are nice."
Terry Pratchett, Sourcery

Re: Your jokes

Punny Pete >Scarlett Overkill<

Took me a while to see it,  so you need to enlarge it.

Nice, though!