Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Current favourite jokes
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Bruno Walter was interviewed about Opera whilst visiting London by the Daily News during May, 1930.
Herr [Bruno] Walter. who is not an anti-modernist, finds that most modern operas which have been produced In Europe in the last decade show a great deal of technical cleverness and wit but little that shows promise of enduring. " Jonny spielt auf," [Ernst Krenek] for example, which
" went up like a rocket, and came down like a stick”.
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Except, Jonathan does not "do" Rachmaninov, (or Rachmaninoff, come to that) as he makes clear on Facebook. The venue mentioned, St Hilda's, Oxford, lent plausibility but It just ain't Jonathan's bag; The source of the image? The BBC's "The Following Events Are Based On A Pack Of Lies". How apposite.
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"Lyndhurst in Hampshire has the greatest crime rates in the country - and Sherlock Holmes is buried there, would you believe?!"
Slebrity millionaire Lizzy Cundy, unchecked and in all seriousness, a moment ago on Storm Huntley, Channel 5, during discussion "Would more bobbies on the beat cut crime?"
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This rather amused me.
“It is totally outrageous and makes Johnson look like a chump”,
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Hope you don't mind, but I'm going to post a joke; but it needs a spot of info. I don't have the linguistic, geographic or piscine/gastronomical skills to fully understand the set up, but I loved the punchline so much. In other words, I think I get it and some here might enjoy.
So here goes:
A woman lands at Logan Airport in Boston. She jumps into a taxi and says to the cabbie, 'Take me to a place where I can get scrod.'
The cabbie turns round and says, 'That's the first time I've heard that requested in the pluperfect subjunctive.'
Scrod is a kind of fish from that region apparently.
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
Hope you don't mind, but I'm going to post a joke; but it needs a spot of info. I don't have the linguistic, geographic or piscine/gastronomical skills to fully understand the set up, but I loved the punchline so much. In other words, I think I get it and some here might enjoy.
So here goes:
A woman lands at Logan Airport in Boston. She jumps into a taxi and says to the cabbie, 'Take me to a place where I can get scrod.'
The cabbie turns round and says, 'That's the first time I've heard that requested in the pluperfect subjunctive.'
Scrod is a kind of fish from that region apparently.
But to be pedantic, isn't "piscine" actually the French for "swimming pool"?
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
Hope you don't mind, but I'm going to post a joke; but it needs a spot of info. I don't have the linguistic, geographic or piscine/gastronomical skills to fully understand the set up, but I loved the punchline so much. In other words, I think I get it and some here might enjoy.
So here goes:
A woman lands at Logan Airport in Boston. She jumps into a taxi and says to the cabbie, 'Take me to a place where I can get scrod.'
The cabbie turns round and says, 'That's the first time I've heard that requested in the pluperfect subjunctive.'
Scrod is a kind of fish from that region apparently.
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"One reason why many children are not potty trained by the time they go to school might be because their parents can't be arsed" - comment on telly this morning. Of six people who heard this remark - the TV host, his two guests, two camera persons, and me - unless they were being deliberately po-faced - only one heard anything funny in it. Which only goes to show that, yet again, I was the odd man out.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post"One reason why many children are not potty trained by the time they go to school might be because their parents can't be arsed" - comment on telly this morning. Of six people who heard this remark - the TV host, his two guests, two camera persons, and me - unless they were being deliberately po-faced - only one heard anything funny in it. Which only goes to show that, yet again, I was the odd man out.
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I enjoyed this in an article in today's Guardian about interpreters:
I am reminded of a cartoon I saw in a German newspaper, showing a man in a boiling rage throttling another man who, despite the violence being visited on him, is completely calm; the caption read, “He is waiting for the verb.”
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