• @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    Hadn’t seen this one before but I saw this in a book:

    There once was a man from Peru,
    Whose limericks stopped at line two

    and then later in the same book they had

    There once was a man from Verdun

  • Hossenfeffer
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    6130 days ago

    There once was a bard from Japan
    Whose limericks never would scan
    When told this was so
    He replied, 'Yes, I know"
    “But I always try and fit as many words into the last line as I possibly can.”

  • teft
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    311 month ago

    The audience always wants more

  • @[email protected]
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    2630 days ago

    Reminds me of an oldie:

    “Roses are red, Violets are blue. Some poems rhyme, This one don’t.”

    • @[email protected]
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      1230 days ago

      I will occasionally go out of my way to put together birthday cards etc for friends and family rather than buy something off the rack. One year I made this for my cousin:

      Roses are red

      (Rose dot jpeg)

      Violets are too

      (Violet in red dot jpeg)

      open

      I ran out of cyan

      Happy birthday

    • Hotdog Salesman
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      930 days ago

      I knew it as

      Roses are red.
      Violets are blue
      I hate rhyming.
      Zebra

    • @[email protected]
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      229 days ago

      Yes these kinds of works works best when you sing them like bards would. Just reading them as is is not as good. Or you can sing them like tenacious d (they got the bard style going on)

  • @[email protected]
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    29 days ago

    My favourite language joke:

    What’s the difference between a cat and a comma?

    One’s got claws at the end of its paws, the other’s a pause at the end of a clause

    *fixed order

      • @[email protected]
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        429 days ago

        yeah doesn’t even work with the classic joke format, in which the words switch places. I’m sure the joke should actually be:

        one has claws at the end of its paws, one denotes a pause at the end of a clause.

  • @[email protected]
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    30 days ago

    … he traded the fifth for a whore

    … the four is an Int I adore

    three third bits is all I afford

  • @[email protected]
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    1630 days ago

    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

    • @[email protected]
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      227 days ago

      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.

        • @[email protected]
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          227 days ago

          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

  • @[email protected]
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    1330 days ago

    whose limericks stopped at line four

    Bad rhythm. Should be “whose limericks would stop at line four”

    • @[email protected]
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      4330 days ago

      That depends on whether you treat “limericks” as a trochee (long-short, i.e. “lim-ricks”) or a dactyl (long-short-short, i.e. “lim-er-icks”).

      • @[email protected]
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        29 days ago

        Egerlach, they once called this bard

        Who’d school any with whom he did spar

        Whether trochee or dactyl

        word choice was impec’ble

        master of prosody, unflappable.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    My bandwidth is crappy through Tor.

    OR

    Too much exposition’s a bore.

    OR

    Though a quatrain’s a ditty,

    My pay’s itty bitty.

    If you cut prose apart, so as to make more,

    Perhaps, one day, I’ll afford my lost oar.