@Beedobi a lawsuit lmfao
gg m8 u get a cookie :P
@Beedobi a lawsuit lmfao
gg m8 u get a cookie :P
@BoneChi11er gg m8 u get a cookie :P
wait was i right
shit man imma go get a cookie
@Beedobi wait was i right
shit man imma go get a cookie
It's oatmeal and raisin :D
There is a word in the English language in which the first two letters signify a male, the first three letters signify a female, the first four signify a great man, and the whole word a great woman. What is the word?
heroine or herobrine (yes shes a girl)
Heroine
Edit - dang 2 seconds too slow!
Beware Miss Herobrine....
There are six sheep eggs in the basket. Six sheeple take one sheep egg each. How can it be that one sheep egg is left in the basket?
Sheep eggs, sounds suspicious.
Is it perhaps because one sheeperson also took the basket, the greedy sod.
>:( sheep aren't greedy ! But u get next riddle
Here's a nice one:
A census taker knocks on a man's door and asks if he has children.
"I have three children" the man says.
The census taker then asks: "How old are they?"
The man, being a keen mathematician replies: "The product of their ages is 72, and the sum of their ages is the same as my door number"
"Don't be ridiculous" says the census taker, "I can't figure out their ages from that"
"Oh right" replies the man "I forgot to mention that my eldest daughter likes chocolate"
The census taker then writes down the ages of the tree children.
How old are the three children, and why?
So the possible ages for 3 children that have a product of 72 is as follows (with their sum in parentheses):
1 1 72 (74)
1 2 36 (39)
1 3 24 (28)
1 4 18 (23)
1 6 12 (19)
1 8 9 (18)
2 2 18 (22)
2 3 12 (17)
2 4 9 (15)
2 6 6 (14) <--
3 3 8 (14) <--
3 4 6 (13)
Since the census taker was not able to figure out the ages even knowing the sum, then the sum must be 14 since there are 2 combinations that add to 14 (3,3,8) and (2,6,6). Finally, indicating that the oldest loves chocolate means that there's one oldest child, so the ages of the children are 3, 3, and 8
Indeed! Give us a challenge then.
A farmer is taking a fox, a chicken, and a bag of grain home. To get there, he must cross a river, but he's only allowed to take one item across the bridge with them at a time. If the fox is left alone with the chicken, the fox will eat the chicken. If the chicken is left alone with the grain, the chicken will eat the grain. How can the farmer cross the river without any of his possessions being eaten?
You put the chicken to the other side, go back, put the fox to there and take the chicken with you. You put the chicken to the first place and take the grain to the other side, come back, and get the chicken.
gdi cile just cos i'm a slow typer >:(
You're a farmer who's taking today's harvest over to town to sell at the market. The road has recently been re-made and there's a fork in the road. You're not quite sure which way to go. Two men stand by the road, there's one on the right, and there's one on the left. One of the men always tells lies, while the other always tells the truth. The market will be closing soon so you only have enough time to ask one of the men one question, and you have to be absolutely sure that you're heading the correct way. What question do you ask?
"what would the other man tell me about the correct road?"
It's literally a rehash of the OP..
@TheDunmerRaven Why is a raven like a writing desk?
(can't believe I took this long to think to post this)
@NutjobBob @TheDunmerRaven Why is a raven like a writing desk?
(can't believe I took this long to think to post this)
can i answer this
even though it might not be the correct or accepted answer