Transcription:

How To Confound A Centaur

Centaur: Hold it right there, you can’t just ride through my fields uncontested! I’ll lose my credibility if we don’t battle or something.

Me: That’s fair. How about we–

Centaur: And it can’t be a pun battle, I heard what you did to the sphinx.

Me: Darn. Okay, what if I beat you in a horse race?

Centaur: Ha! Alright, your funeral. Where’s the finish line?

Me: That tree over there. Where’s your horse?

Centaur: (gestures at horsey backside) Um…?

Me: You’re not a horse, this is a HORSE race. You have to race with an actual horse.

Centaur: You want me… a centaur… to RIDE a regular horse.

Me: That is, linguistically-speaking, what you agreed to.

Centaur:

Me:

Centaur: I hate you.

Me: That’s fair.

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  • @[email protected]
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    10 days ago

    Sphinx: You there, knight. I am the guardian of this place and cannot allow you to pass without a battle.

    Me: My name is Ender, Sir Ender to you. And I’m a bit weary from my long journey here, would you accept a pun battle?

    Sphinx: Aye, Sir Ender.

    Me: Thank you, please move aside

  • @[email protected]
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    10 days ago

    In case you’re serious with the sphinx question: in ancient Greek myth the entrance to the city of Thebes was guarded by a sphinx who would only let you through if you could solve a riddle, otherwise the sphinx would eat you. Which riddle that would be changes from story to story but the most famous one is along the lines of “What creature walks on four legs in the morning, two at noon and three in the evening?”. This was eventually solved by king Oedipus who realized it was a human who crawls as a baby, walks on two legs as an adult and needs a walking stick as a third leg when they’re old. Depending on which version you read, the sphinx was either so shocked by him solving the riddle that it threw itself from a cliff or was simply slain by him.

    • @[email protected]
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      3110 days ago

      “What creature walks on four legs in the morning, two at noon and three in the evening?”

      Traveler: Me, when I wake up with a hangover in the morning, sober up by noon, then get so much withdrawal that I need a walking cane on my way to the bar again in the evening.

      Sphinx: You need help?

    • ZagorathOP
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      2710 days ago

      Depending on which version you read, the sphinx was either so shocked by him solving the riddle that it threw itself from a cliff or was simply slain by him

      omg this part I did not know. I just thought it…let him pass.

      But anyway, what does that have to do with the “pun battle” as posed in this story?

      • @[email protected]
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        10 days ago

        Well, you could consider the solution to the riddle a pun though that’s quite a stretch. Though there is at least one modern rendition (in German) that directly uses a more pun-ny solution. It does’t quite translate to English but I’ll try. Basically, Oedipus thinks and thinks until he starts to complain “Ach Mensch…” which is roughly equal to English “Oh boy…” but “Mensch” is literally the German for “human” so it’s the right solution and the sphinx has to accept it. If you understand German, I highly recommend checking out this version. It’s “König Ödipus” by Bodo Wartke. He plays all roles himself on a mostly empty stage with only a couple of props and it’s absolutely hilarious. The sphinx is a lion hand puppet.

        Edit: for anyone interested, here’s a youtube clip of the scene: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DogC57ZJuY8 (German with German subtitles)

        • ZagorathOP
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          1810 days ago

          which is roughly equal to English “Oh boy…”

          English also has the phrase “oh man” with pretty much the same meaning. Plus, though this is slightly archaic today (depending on context), “man” can be a gender-neutral word meaning “human”. So the same pun could work perfectly in English.

          It’s very clever, thanks for sharing!

          • @[email protected]
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            810 days ago

            Yeah, as I said in response to exocrinous, that would work. No idea why it slipped my mind when I typed my comment. I think I even thought of something similar, it sounded wrong in some way and so I went a different route.

            • ZagorathOP
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              910 days ago

              Oh man, that’s what I get for replying from my inbox and not checking the latest in the thread.

        • @[email protected]
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          910 days ago

          The pun works equally well in English. “Aw, man!” has the same meaning as Ach mensch.

    • @Defenestrator
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      1210 days ago

      “What creature walks on four legs in the morning, two at noon and three in the evening?”

      A kobold. In the morning it scurries around on all fours, trying to get everything in order before its master wakes up. At midday, it stands at attention before its master. By the evening, it gets tired and leans on its tail a bit.

  • Bunnylux
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    3010 days ago

    This pedant is hated my every fantastical creature in the realm.

    • ZagorathOP
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      1710 days ago

      And if the answer to that is yes…is it more or less gross than if the centaur borked a human?

      • @[email protected]
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        1410 days ago

        Way less gross. Human and centaur are both intelligent, can communicate, and give consent, so it would be fine. With a horse (which has none of these things) the centaur would be committing bestiality.

        • @[email protected]
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          510 days ago

          Well, in many games there is a Speak With Animals spells or equivalent. They are capable of communication, we just usually can’t understand.

      • @[email protected]
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        1210 days ago

        Apply the Harkness test (self aware intelligence, physical maturity, and ability to communicate consent). Both humans and centaurs pass assuming the individual is a willing adult, horses fail twice due to being nonsapient and uncommunicative.

      • @[email protected]
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        1010 days ago

        From the human perpective, probably the horse is a little bit less gross. From the centaur perpective, probably the human is less gross, but I’m only half centaur, so can’t speak for all of them.

      • @Zozano
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        710 days ago

        It depends how it flops.

        Does it flop at the first set of legs, or the second?

  • Aielman15
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    11 days ago

    The sphinx agreed to a pun battle.

    The human took two pans, gave one to the sphinx, and said “Now fight!”

    • ZagorathOP
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      611 days ago

      I’m afraid I don’t get it.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 days ago

        Try pronouncing the ‘a’ in pan like the ‘a’ in large, then you’ll end up with a rather well-done pun.

        • ZagorathOP
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          710 days ago

          So if you grossly mispronounce the word, it becomes a pun? I don’t think that’s a very good pun, tbh…

          • @[email protected]
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            10 days ago

            To be honest, I don’t really like it either, which might surprise you considering my last sentence. I just couldn’t resist making a small pun myself.

          • @[email protected]
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            110 days ago

            Got a laugh from me, but I did mean only the ‘a’, not the ‘ar’. I couldn’t think of any other English word with that sound unfortunately, do you have a better suggestion?

            • @[email protected]
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              310 days ago

              Unfortunately I can’t seem to get it to work for any sound with my hodgepodge of an English accent. Perhaps it could work with a very thick cockney accent, but the length of the vowel would be quite different between the two,

              e.g. puhn and paahn

          • ZagorathOP
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            310 days ago

            RP might use a similar vowel, but even most modern British people don’t seem to pronounce these very similarly based on this pronouncing dictionary’s advice and sample clips. And I can confirm as an Australian that Australian English accents don’t pronounce them remotely similarly.

  • @[email protected]
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    610 days ago

    Dog racing is dogs running without a rider. I’m sure there have happened riderless horseracing before. I spot a fault in the logic!

    • ZagorathOP
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      1010 days ago

      Riderless horseracing maybe, but surely never horseless horseracing.