I believe that it featured in the writings of one of the Greek writers, several hundred years BC.First heard in 1960.....
I believe that it featured in the writings of one of the Greek writers, several hundred years BC.First heard in 1960.....
Aesop?I believe that it featured in the writings of one of the Greek writers, several hundred years BC.
Maybe - but I don't know, so I won't pretend. I suspect though, it may have been one of the comic writers. My money would be on Aristophanes (b. c.450BC). It's the sort of thing he would write about. Aesop was more into moral tales.Aesop?
Nah! It was those two Roman guys Morecombus and Wiseus.Maybe - but I don't know, so I won't pretend. I suspect though, it may have been one of the comic writers. My money would be on Aristophanes (b. c.450BC). It's the sort of thing he would write about. Aesop was more into moral tales.
Maybe - but I don't know, so I won't pretend. I suspect though, it may have been one of the comic writers. My money would be on Aristophanes (b. c.450BC). It's the sort of thing he would write about. Aesop was more into moral tales.
Aesop?
ANALYSIS WARNINGMaybe - but I don't know, so I won't pretend. I suspect though, it may have been one of the comic writers. My money would be on Aristophanes (b. c.450BC). It's the sort of thing he would write about. Aesop was more into moral tales.
Joke thread 111?ANALYSIS WARNING
The hare and the crunchy pie, one of the better known fables from Aesop.Aesop?
I only ever cut my pizza in four.
Generally - almost always - I agree with this but I do know of one exception. It dates back a few years but let's see how many people understand the joke.The moment a "joke" is scrutinised or analysed it ceases
to be funny. (If indeed it was, in the first place).
"He stoppeth one of three."Generally - almost always - I agree with this but I do know of one exception. It dates back a few years but let's see how many people understand the joke.
It goes back to when a goalkeeper called David Seaman was nearing the end of his top-level career and apparently he let in a series of "easy" goals. Don't ask for details because I am not a football fan. Anyway, a newspaper ran a caption competition based on a photo of the ball getting past him for one of these goals. The winning caption was "Even the ancient mariner...". I didn't understand it until it was explained to me but once it was explained I did think it was funny. Does the panel agree?
How many people understand the joke? How many people think it is funny? How many people, like me, need the joke explained but then agree that it is funny?
I only ever cut my pizza in four.
I couldn't eat six pieces.
Well, he did write about a tortoise [& a hare]Maybe - but I don't know, so I won't pretend. I suspect though, it may have been one of the comic writers. My money would be on Aristophanes (b. c.450BC). It's the sort of thing he would write about. Aesop was more into moral tales.
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