• @evidences
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    681 month ago

    I used to work with a couple Czech dudes. One day my coworkers and I were badgering the one dude to tell us a Czech joke. He was pretty reluctant because he said he could only really think of one joke but wasn’t sure it would translate well. When he finally told us the joke he got us with this masterpiece.

    Two balloons are floating along, one says to the other and hey look a cactus.

    All of us were confused by this, he told us it was much funnier in Czech because balloon and cactus sound similar so it’s a pun. So we had him tell us the joke untranslated in Czech and balloon and cactus sound nothing alike.

    I’m still not sure if this dude was fucking with us.

    • @angrystego
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      391 month ago

      It’s a silly joke for little kids of preschool age and it only makes sense if you include the right sound effects. It’s supposed to go like this: Two balloons are floating along, one says to the other: - Hey look a cactussssssssssss! - Where isssssssssss it?

      • @angrystego
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        431 month ago

        One that works in English:

        A superconductor came to a bar and ordered a beer. The barman said - I’m not giving you a beer! Get the fuck out of my bar! The superconductor left without any resistance.

        • SkaveRat
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          fedilink
          291 month ago

          An argon atom walks into a bar. The barman says: “We don’t serve your kind here. get out”. The argon atom doesn’t react.

          • optional
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            fedilink
            191 month ago

            A neutron walks into a bar and asks: “How much for a beer?” The barman says: “For you, no charge”.

            • @[email protected]
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              fedilink
              171 month ago

              Oh hey the German version of this joke is also one that doesn’t translate! “A neutron walks into a bar. The bartender says: Sorry, only invited guests.” In German, “geladen” means both “invited” and “charged”.

              • @Klear
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                71 month ago

                A neutrino walks into a bar. The bartender asks what it wants to drink.

                “Oh, nothing, I’m just passing through.”

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        English
        51 month ago

        What’s the Czech word that’s being use for the “issss?” Since “cactus” ends with an “s” sound in both English and Czech, the joke might translate directly.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          English
          151 month ago

          I’m Czech. The Czech version of the joke is indeed no funnier than the English translation (unless you count the bit of variety in the degassing sounds) and it’s a preschool classic. Here is the most common version (they’re all basically the same anyway) and a literal translation:

          Letí dva balónky po poušti. Jeden říká: „Pozor, kaktusssss!“ — „Kde ho vidíšššššš?“

          Two balloons are flying across a desert. One says: “Watch out, a cactusssss!” — “Where do you see it? shhhhh…”

          I think your colleagues had a very dark or offensive joke, as these are common in Czechia. Not wanting to get into trouble, they quickly replied with the first one that came into their mind and then made up excuses for laughing so hard.

        • @angrystego
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          31 month ago

          The second question is Kde ho vidíššššš? Which ends on a sh sound and the last word of the sentence means see, as in Where do you see it?