tinx
Well-known member
Shit isn't it.
fatbadger said:OK, OK, I get it. But I though that point was that it was spelt with "gry" and it was the third word, following the sentence in which 'angry' is the third word. This is because of what linguists call 'cohesion' - the phrase 'the third one' represents an ellipsis of the noun phrase and post modifier 'words in the English language / that end in"gry"'. Thus it has to refer (if this is 'good' English) to a word that ends in "gry". Thus, the third sentence refers paratactically back to the first sentence, but (necessarily) hypotactically to the second sentence - therefore it is the third word of the second sentence, which does actually end with "gry", and it is thus 'angry'.
Lord Bracknell said:I don't think the question was properly phrased.
What Superphil meant to ask was:-
"Think of words ending in -GRY. Angry and hungry are two of them. There are only three words in the English language. What is the third word? The word is something that everyone uses every day. If you have listened carefully, I have already told you what it is."
tinx said:The answer's language. The bit in the middle is just to throw you off the scent and cofnuse ou which it seems to have done quite successfully. If you ignore the bit in the middle the quesiton is:-
There are three words in the english language....
what is the third word?
fatbadger said:I appreciate that - what I am saying is that it is worded wrongly - there is a postmodifier in the first sentence that, if this is good English (which is what I would a riddle, of all things, must be!) then it IS material to the question.
I think Lord Bracknell's re-wording is much, much better. Like it or not, the answer to the version we were originally given is 'angry'.
Lord Bracknell said:Try this one:-
A man wanted to enter an exclusive club but did not know the password that was required. He waited by the door and listened. A club member knocked on the door and the doorman said, "twelve." The member replied, "six " and was let in. A second member came to the door and the doorman said, "six." The member replied, "three" and was let in. The man thought he had heard enough and walked up to the door. The doorman said ,"ten" and the man replied, "five." But he was not let in.
What should have he said?
Lord Bracknell said:Try this one:-
A man wanted to enter an exclusive club but did not know the password that was required. He waited by the door and listened. A club member knocked on the door and the doorman said, "twelve." The member replied, "six " and was let in. A second member came to the door and the doorman said, "six." The member replied, "three" and was let in. The man thought he had heard enough and walked up to the door. The doorman said ,"ten" and the man replied, "five." But he was not let in.
What should have he said?
Lord Bracknell said:Try this one:-
A man wanted to enter an exclusive club but did not know the password that was required. He waited by the door and listened. A club member knocked on the door and the doorman said, "twelve." The member replied, "six " and was let in. A second member came to the door and the doorman said, "six." The member replied, "three" and was let in. The man thought he had heard enough and walked up to the door. The doorman said ,"ten" and the man replied, "five." But he was not let in.
What should have he said?