April 2, 2007
The Perfect Piece
for the Opunion Page
One of the sad
things about the world in which we live is that nobody tells puns any
more. Oh, sure, every year in early January, Americans celebrate
“National Save the Pun Week”, but nobody really pays much attention to
it.
A pun - also known
as paronomasia - is a figure of speech that consists of a deliberate
confusion of similar words or phrases for rhetorical effect.
Puns have been all
but lost in this hurry-up world. Try to remember the last time you heard
a good pun. Can’t do it, can you?
In tribute to the
pun, here are some of my favorites.
I telephoned a
friend of mine who is a judge the other day during the dinner hour and
his wife told me, “I’m sorry, Bob, but his honor is at steak.”
Police nabbed a
hermit who was driving 95 miles-an-hour on the interstate. The charge?
Recluse driving.
Out in the ocean one
day, a father drop of water and a mother drop of water were teaching
their offspring how to be part of the sea. After a month of training,
the father drop of water was extremely pleased with his son’s progress.
He told the mother drop of water, “I do believe we’ve taught junior
everything he needs to know. I hereby declare him fit to be tide.”
Question: Why did
the crow sit on the telephone line?
Answer: He wanted to
make a long-distance caw.
Then there’s the one
about the two burglars who were leaving a bakery and one told the other
“You take the cake.”
There was this guy
named Bill Baker who loved his wife Katherine, but he also loved a woman
named Edith who he met at a party. When Bill went to court to see if he
could also marry the second light of his life, the judge told him, “Mr.
Baker, you cannot have your Kate and Edie, too.”
And, finally did you
hear about . . .
- The guy who
married three wives just to break the monogamy?
- The owners of the
dry cleaning company who called a press conference?
- The fortune
teller who charged medium prices?
- The
delicatessen owner who posted a sign in his shop that said “Our
tongue sandwiches speak for
themselves!”
- The old man who
died and left his son 150 clocks. It took the son years
to wind up the estate.
- Then there’s the
tale of the real estate salesman who asked a customer
"Would you like to see
the model home?” and
the guy replied, “Sure, what
time does she get off work?"
Or, as Noah said as
the animals were boarding the ark, “Now I herd everything.”
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