Que?Quote:
Originally Posted by Honest Gaza
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Que?Quote:
Originally Posted by Honest Gaza
NO....just going through the motions....carrying on undeterred....I wonder if his mummy let him lick the bowl....was he feeling flushed afterwards ?....Quote:
Originally Posted by
Well, he once referred to himself as a tampon, so I suppose the answer is anybody's guess. But I'll have a go......WINGNUTQuote:
Originally Posted by hexbaz
Nah, he just thought that he was a bloody cotton wool brain.Quote:
Well, he once referred to himself as a tampon
Sorry - this is obviously more difficult than I had envisaged. The answer is along the lines of King Charles III and there is no trick. He does not want to use Charles due to bad press with the previous Charlies.
I will be unavailable for a day, so feel free to post another question - let me know if you have given up on the royalty question and I'll post the answer on my return to this hallowed board.
King Chas III ?
He wants to be a Georgie Porgie.
Pudding and Pie?
Umm..this is a longshot because of all the French kings with the same name but my guess is King Louis I, named after his favourite uncle Lord Louis Mountbatten.
Pudding'n'pie number VII
Yep - Bob has it right. King George VII.... Over to you!Quote:
Originally Posted by Bob Willson
I know it's not my turn but a question came to me while I was reading the forum and watching the Simpsons at the same time.
Lisa asks her father:
Name three words where y is the vowel.
But we're better than that, we have to name 4!
Any 4?
Lynx.....Meow
Sythe........which I can still use
Type.............what I'm doing now
Steak and Kidney….whoops;
Sydney where we have both vowel and constonant
Count
Not my question but, lynx seems ok. The "e" in sythe, type and Sydney seem to make them null and void.
I came up with
1. why
2, fry
3. sky
4. supercallifragilisticexpeallidocious (not sure of the spellin)
hhmm, seems a bit mabiguous the way I wrote it.
OK, lets change it to:
Name three words where y is the ONLY vowel
So Lynx is a goer, but not the others
yes, was a bit easy
I had rhythm, crypt, tryst and the lynx
Obviously I was lulled in to a false sense of intelligence because Homer couldn't get any
OOOOOH OOOOHHH Mr Kotter, Mr Kotter I got another one
fly :D
Then theres sty, dry, cry, spy
Permission to spit the Dummy
where's the judge/adjudicator?
I read the Q as words with "Y" as a vowel.
Nothing about NOT having other vowels..........
Who's a laywer...........hey, there's a "Y"
Dummy spit over; time to sulk ;)
Count
Ok, assuming its my turn, if not please ignore my question.
Wev'e all heard of murphys law, that is, anyhting that can go wrong, will go wrong.
BUT.
Was there a mr murphy?
AND
who was he what did he do and why did his law or laws come around?
I think I can manage the first one:
Yes there was a Mr Murphy ;)
Yes there was a Murphy, but the law wasn't named after him. It was named after another bloke of the same name. :confused:
That's my contribution. A 'hot toddy' and an early night to try to shake off this cold.
'night all. :D
Doesn't count (pun), misspeltQuote:
Originally Posted by Ivan in Oz
Gum has been chewed for some time now, how old is the oldest piece of chewing gum
Maybe a bit late, but how about syzygy - the conjunction or opposition of two heavenly bodies (Marilyn Monroe & Jayne Mansfield?)
Dunno, but I'm betting that its lost its flavour.:DQuote:
Originally Posted by Bob Willson
Hang on, and I'll check my bedpost. :D
OK, it's been too quiet here for a couple of weeks!.....
Who's going to be the first to solve the riddle below? Try to do it without google!
(Hint: The answer is mathematical)
Sir, I bear a rhyme excelling
In mystic force and magic spelling
Celestial sprites elucidate
All my own striving can't relate
Eight,
NOT ate as in consume.
Though I'm on the fang at the moment.
Ivan in Oz
Home 'Poota up and running next week
WHEN I GET A POWER SUPPLY :mad:
Sorry - no. Interestingly, 8 is the same answer that my brother gave (great minds think alike). I see why that might be a reasonable answer, but the answer is more complex than that. It will be obvious when you do get it - and it does have a very vague connection with woodwork!Quote:
Originally Posted by Ivan in Oz
Maybe Ivan's "consume" is more relevant to the real answer than he thinks?
:D ... Sounds like you know the answer, Mr. C!Quote:
Originally Posted by simon c
yep, I remember learning them from school. although I'm a bit of a mathematician so I actually found it easier to remember the real thing rather than the mnemonic!
Simon
PS I'm trying not to get it right so I don't have to come up with another one as I'm going away for the weekend
Yeah me too!Quote:
Originally Posted by simon c
I loved your construction sign by the way (saves me replying to that thread!). It is doing the rounds in UK now.
Have a great weekend.
OK i'll "bite"
The answer is that it is a mnemonic for pi. Where the number of letters in each word signify the digits (ie 3.14159 etc). The one I learned at school was Now, I wish I could recollect pi. But that would have been no good for the quiz as the answer was in the question.
So my turn
This is quite famous but a good one as it is so counter-intuitive. It took me a day of thinking about it before I could get the emotional side of the brain to accept what the logical side was telling me. I even had to try it a few times.
You are a contestant on a game show. You are shown three doors. Behind one door is a car, and behind each of the other two is a goat (the goal is to get the car!). You get to pick one of the doors. Then the host (who knows what is behind the doors) opens one of the doors that you did not pick and shows you a goat. The host then gives you the option to stick with your current door or switch to the other door. Do you stick or switch and what difference to your chance of winning does it make?
Simon
Ok I'll take a swing at this.
Personally, I'd take the goat and run but that's not one of the options. :D
Your odds are reduced from 1 in 3 to 1 in 2 by the removal of one door.
From that point the chances of winning are the same ( 1 in 2) whether you stay with your current choice or change. :confused:
Hi duckman, that's the intuitive answer but isn't actually the right one. Set up a little experiment and try it.
If I've selected a 'goat door' then the host will select the second 'goat door' leaving the car door unselected. Naturally I would want to change my selection, but, I don't know that I've selected a 'goat door', so I'm no better off.
OTOH, if I've selected the car door then the host can select either of the two 'goat doors' leaving just one 'goat door'. In this case I would want to keep my currrent selection, but again, I don't know that I've selected the car door.
I'm going to have to think about this some more. :)
Hooroo for now...
You say that the host knows what is behind the doors. This has a big bearing on the answer, I think - he will avoid opening the door with the car, for game show suspense purposes.
This really slews the probabilities - I am not great at mathematics, but I would say you have a better chance of winning, given the above facts, if you were to change your mind.
Just to clarify, the host knows what is behind the doors and always reveals a goat leaving one goat and the car remaining.