@gedaliyah to Dad JokesEnglish • 6 months agoA short drive from Limerick, Irelandimagemessage-square55arrow-up1758arrow-down117
arrow-up1741arrow-down1imageA short drive from Limerick, Ireland@gedaliyah to Dad JokesEnglish • 6 months agomessage-square55
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish16•6 months agoNot a limerick but I want to share my favorite pun joke I once submitted ten puns to a pun contest, hoping one would win, but No pun intended
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish4•6 months agoI always thought that joke needs an actual pun in the first half so the “no pun intended” has a valid double meaning. I came up with: I told the sad ghost ten puns to raise its spirits. No pun intendid.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish3•6 months agoIt’s word play. No pun intended. “No pun in ten did [win the contest]”
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish3•6 months agoYes I understand. It works spelled that way. But “no pun intended” doesn’t work because there was no pun in the initial setup. In my version both meanings make sense
Not a limerick but I want to share my favorite pun joke
I once submitted ten puns to a pun contest, hoping one would win, but
No pun intended
HA! Nice!
I always thought that joke needs an actual pun in the first half so the “no pun intended” has a valid double meaning. I came up with:
I told the sad ghost ten puns to raise its spirits. No pun intendid.
It’s word play.
No pun intended.
“No pun in ten did [win the contest]”
Yes I understand. It works spelled that way. But “no pun intended” doesn’t work because there was no pun in the initial setup. In my version both meanings make sense