24 Wordplay-Based Jokes That Will Make You Giggle
Get ready for some bookish humour: We’ve rounded up a few of our favourite word-based jokes and puns.
Comedic timing
1 The past, the present, and the future walked into a bar. It was tense.
2 Can February March? No, but April May!
3 Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana.
4 I ordered an egg and a chicken on Amazon. I’ll let you know.
Comma ’gain?
5 What’s the difference between a literalist and a kleptomaniac?
A literalist takes things literally.
A kleptomaniac takes things, literally.
6 I was walking past a farm, and a sign read: “Duck, eggs!” I thought, “That’s an unnecessary comma—then it hit me.”
Fun with puns
7 I’m going to stand outside. So if anyone asks, I’m outstanding.
8 What do you call a can opener that doesn’t work? A can’t opener.
9 Why did Shakespeare only write using pens? Pencils confused him. 2B or not 2B.
10 You do realize that vampires aren’t real. Unless you Count Dracula.
11 Why did the introvert become an astronomer? She needed her space.
Dad jokes (about dads)
12 When does a dad joke become a dad joke? When it becomes apparent.
13 My dad always said I loved alphabet soup growing up. But really it was just him putting words in my mouth.
14 It’s not a dad bod—it’s a father figure!
15 Me: “I just need to go change real quick.”
Dad: “Don’t ever change!”
Le mot juste
16 What do you call a nocturnal insect that knows just the right word? Le moth juste.
17 What kind of dinosaur can help you find a handy synonym? A thesaurus.
18 What kept the polecat reporter busy all day? Ferreting out details.
19 What’s a cicada’s favourite beverage? Well, it’s gotta be seasonally brood.
20 Outside a dog, a book is probably a man’s best friend. Inside a dog, it’s too dark to read.
21 “Knock knock.”
“Who’s there?”
“To.”
“To who?”
“Actually, it’s to whom.”
Brainteasers
22 Before was was was, was was is.
23 I invented a new word! Plagiarism.
24 A word in this sentence is misspelled.
Excellent writing isn’t easy, even when the subject is just a goofy joke about an alligator who only thought of the right thing to say after it was too late. (He had l’esprit de l’scales. No? . . . We’ll keep working on that one.)
Whatever the case, Grammarly can help your writing shine, so the only misspellings and misplaced commas are the ones you selected for comedic effect. After all, you want your words to deliver smiles wherever they go—not whenever they go.
Source: https://www.grammarly.com/blog/wordplay-based-jokes/