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JOKES AND Riddles!!

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X Abdulrahman X:
haha this was the first topic in google :P

Okay, enough subscribers to the Brainpower Newsletter have contacted me about the riddle of the "thats," that I am going to do my best to explain the answer more fully. First, here is the riddle and the answer:

Can you punctuate the following, in order to make it a proper English sentence?

I said that that that that that man wrote should have been underlined

The Answer To The Riddle

I said that,"that 'that' that that man wrote should have been underlined."

The Controversy Of The Riddle

Some of you tell me that "that" can only be used four times in a row correctly. Others just want an explanation. Here's my best shot:

Let's start with some of the definitions of the word "that" in my dictionary:

(As a pronoun)

1. The one designated or implied. "What kind of soup is that?"

2. Used as the subject or object of a relative clause, esp. one defining or restricting the antecedent, sometimes replaceable by who, whom, or which: the horse that he bought.

(As a conjunction)

3. Used to introduce a subordinate clause. "I doubt that you are right."

In addition to these definitions it is possible to use any word as a noun when referring to the word itself in quotation marks: The third "that" is used in this way, as it is in this sentence as well. So to analyze the sentence now:

I said that(1),"that(2) 'that'(3) that(4) that(5) man wrote should have been underlined."

(1)The first "that" is used according to the second definition, as a conjunction. It introduces the quote. Strictly speaking it isn't necessary, but in English it is allowed. For example, either of the following two sentences are correct:

1. I said, "I don't want to do any more riddles."

2. I said that, "I don't want to do any more riddles."

(2) The second "that" follows the first pronoun definition: "The one designated or implied."

(3) The one it designates is the third "that," which has quotation marks since it references itself (it is used as a noun). This is easier to understand if you imagine another word, like "letter" in its place: I said that, "That letter that..." - except that it was not a letter written, but the word "that."

(4) The fourth "that" is used according to the second definition. This is easier to understand if you replace it with "which": I said that "that 'that' which that man wrote..."

(5) The fifth "that" refers to the man, again using the first definition: "The one designated or implied."

Clearer? Perhaps not. However, does the following sentence make sense?

I said that, "that word which that man wrote should have been underlined."

 
Now just replace "which" with "that," and it still makes sense, right?

I said that, "that word that that man wrote should have been underlined."

And finally, replace "word" with "that," and it is clear that the speaker is referring to a specific incidence of the word "that," in whatever the man wrote, and that the speaker thinks (for some reason) that the word should be underlined.

I said that, "that 'that' that that man wrote should have been underlined."

And that is all that I have to say about that riddle and that "that" or any other "that" that comes along. Which "that?" Never mind that.

sanity_master:
i kinda understood it actually before i googled it but i made no sense to me at first......

any1 needs explanation??

sanity_master:
the answer and the explanation for it is there ya abdo :D :P

Monica:
haha!! +rep google everyone!! lol!!

here is another one!!

My life can be measured in hours,
I serve by being devoured.
Thin, I am quick
Fat, I am slow
Wind is my foe.
What am I?

X Abdulrahman X:
yep, do i need to say more :P

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