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A gentleman
wanders around the campus of a college looking for the library. He
approaches a student and asked, "Excuse me young man. Would you be good
enough and tell me where the library is at?"
The student, in
a very arrogant and belittling tone, replied, "I sorry, sir, but at
this school, we are taught never to end a sentence with a preposition!"
The gentleman
smiled, and in a very apologetic tone replied, "I beg your pardon.
Please allow me to rephrase my question. Would you be good enough to
tell me where the library is at, asshole?"
"I've
just had the most awful time," said a boy to his friends. "First I got
angina pectoris, then arteriosclerosis. Just as I was recovering, I got
psoriasis. They gave me hypodermics, and to top it all, tonsillitis was
followed by appendectomy."
"Wow!
How did you pull through?" sympathized his friends.
"I
don't know," the boy replied. "Toughest spelling test I ever had."
The linguist's
husband walked in and caught his wife sleeping with a young co-ed. He
said, "Why, Susan, I'm surprised." She bolted upright, pointed her
finger and corrected him, "No. I am surprised. You are astonished."
An English
professor complained to the pet shop proprietor, "The parrot I
purchased uses improper language."
"I'm surprised," said the owner. "I've never taught that bird to
swear."
"Oh, it isn't that," explained the professor. "But yesterday I heard
him split an infinitive."
A linguistics
professor was lecturing his class the other day. "In English," he said,
"a double negative forms a positive. However, in some languages, such
as Russian, a double negative remains a negative. But there isn't a
single language, not one, in which a double positive can express a
negative."
A voice from the back of the room retorted, "Yeah, right."
A language is a
dialect with an army and a navy.
The manager of
a large city zoo was drafting a letter to order a pair of animals. He
sat at his computer and typed the following sentence: "I would like to
place an order for two mongooses, to be delivered at your earliest
convenience."
He stared at
the screen, focusing on that odd word mongooses. Then he deleted the
word and added another, so that the sentence now read: "I would like to
place an order for two mongeese, to be delivered at your earliest
convenience."
Again he stared
at the screen, this time focusing on the new word, which seemed just as
odd as the original one. Finally, he deleted the whole sentence and
started all over. "Everyone knows no full-stocked zoo should be without
a mongoose," he typed. "Please send us two of them."
Mr Goldberg,
from Pinsk, coming to America, shared a table in the ship's dining room
with a Frenchman. Mr Goldberg could speak neither French nor English;
the Frenchman could speak neither Russian nor Yiddish.
The first day out, the Frenchman approached the table, bowed and said, "Bon
appétit!"
Goldberg, puzzled for a moment, bowed back and replied "Goldberg."
Every day, at every meal, the same routine occured.
On the fifth day, another passenger took Goldberg aside. "Listen, the
Frenchman isn't telling you his name. He's saying 'Good Appetite,'
that's what 'Bon appétit!' means."
At the next meal, Mr Goldberg, beaming, bowed to the Frenchman and
said, "Bon appétit!" .
And the Frenchman, beaming, replied: "Goldberg!"
Leo Rosten, The
Joys of Yiddish
The village
blacksmith finally found an apprentice willing to work hard for long
hours. The blacksmith immediately began his instructions to the lad,
"When I take the shoe out of the fire, I'll lay it on the anvil; and
when I nod my head, you hit it with this hammer."
The apprentice did just as he told. Now he's the village blacksmith.
A nun is
undressing for a bath and while she's standing naked, there's a knock
at the door. The nun calls, "Who is it?"
A voice answers, "A blind salesman."
The nun decides to get a thrill by having the blind man in the room
while she's naked so she lets him in. The man walks in, looks straight
at the nun and says, "Uhhhh, well hello there, can I sell you a blind,
dearie...?"
Four linguists
were sharing a compartment on a train on their way to an international
conference on sound symbolism. One was English, one Spanish, one French
and the fourth German. They got into a discussion on whose language was
the most eloquent and euphonious.
The English
linguist said: "Why, English is the most eloquent language. Take for
instance the word "butterfly". Butterfly, butterfly.. doesn't that word
so beautifully express the way this delicate insect flies. It's like
flutter-by, flutter-by." "Oh, no!" said the Spanish linguist, "the word
for "butterfly" in Spanish is "maripose". Now, this word expresses so
beautifully the vibrant colours on the butterfly's wings. What could be
a more apt name for such a brilliant creature? Spanish is the most
eloquent language!" "Papillon!" says the French linguist, "papillon!
This word expresses the fragility of the butterfly's wings and body.
This is the most fitting name for such a delicate and ethereal insect.
French is the most eloquent language!" At this the German linguist
stands up, and demands: "Und vot is rongk mit 'SCHMETTERLING'?"
A Mexican
bandit held up a bank in Tucson. The sheriff and his deputy chased him.
When they captured him, and the sheriff, who couldn't speak Spanish,
asked him where he'd hidden the money. "No se nada," he replied.
The sheriff
put a gun to the bandit's head and said to his bi-lingual deputy: "Tell
him that if he doesn't tell us where the money is right now, I'll blow
his brains out." Upon receiving the translation, the bandit became very
animated. "Ya me acuerdo! Tienen que caminar tres cuadradas hasta ese
gran arbol. Debajo del arbol, alli esta el dinero." The sheriff leaned
forward. "Yeah? Well..?"
The deputy replied: "He says he wants to die like a man."
A childless
Canadian couple decided to adopt a Mexican baby. After they got the
baby, they decided to enroll in a Spanish class. When asked why, the
wife replied, "so that when the baby starts to talk, we'll be able to
understand him."
If lawyers are
disbarred and clergymen defrocked, doesn't it follow that electricians
can be delighted, musicians denoted, cowboys deranged, models deposed
and dry cleaners depressed?
Laundry workers
could decrease, eventually becoming depressed and depleted! Even more,
bedmakers will be debunked, baseball players will be debased,
landscapers will be deflowered, bulldozer operators will be degraded,
software engineers will be detested, and even musical composers will
eventually decompose.
Simple
Questions, Complicated Answers
Why is abbreviated
such a long word?
Why does
monosyllabic have five syllables?
Why is
brassiere singular and panties plural?
Why isn't
phonetic spelled the way it sounds?
Why is a
carrot more orange than an orange?
Why are there
interstate highways in Hawaii?
Why do we
drive on parkways and park on driveways?
Why are they
called apartments , when they're all stuck together?
Why do
scientists call it research when looking for something new?
Why do they
call it a building ? It looks like they're finished. Why isn't it a
built ?
Why is it when
you transport something by car, it's called a shipment, but when you
transport something by ship, it's called cargo?
If vegetarians
eat vegetables, what do humanitarians eat?
If price and
worth mean the same thing, why priceless and worthless are opposites?
Is there
another word for synonym ?
Is it possible
to be totally partial?
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