Why not start your week with a little fun?
Here’s some rhetorical questions you may like to ponder:
- If it’s true that we are here to help others, then what exactly are the others here for?
- How come no one ever says, “It’s only a game” when their team is winning?
- If a pig loses its voice, is it disgruntled?
- Why is the man who invests all your money called a broker?
- If you take an Oriental person and spin him around several times, does he become disoriented?
- Why do overlook and oversee mean opposite things?
- Why do we say something is out of whack? What’s a whack?
- Why is a person who plays the piano called a pianist but a person that drives a race car is not called a racist?
- Why are a wise man and a wise guy opposites?
- When someone asks you, “A penny for your thoughts,” and you put your two cents in, what happens to the other penny?
- If people from Poland are called Poles, why aren’t people from Holland called Holes?
- Why do croutons come in airtight packages? It’s just stale bread to begin with.
- If Fed Ex and UPS were to merge, would they call the resulting company Fed UP?
- Why isn’t the number 11 pronounced onety one?
- Do Lipton Tea employees take coffee breaks?
- When cheese gets its picture taken, what does it say?
- “I am” is reportedly the shortest sentence in the English language. Could it be that “I do” is the longest sentence?
- If lawyers are disbarred and clergymen defrocked, doesn’t it follow that electricians can be delighted, musicians denoted, cowboys deranged, models deposed, tree surgeons debarked, and dry cleaners depressed?
- I was thinking about how people seem to read the Bible a whole lot more as they get older. Then it dawned on me….. they’re cramming for their final exam.
- Ever wonder what the speed of lightning would be if it didn’t zigzag?
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