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Irish Builders Application

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DTCwordfan | 17:22 Fri 24th Nov 2017 | Jokes
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An Irishman goes on to a building site looking for a job and is told by the foreman that he will have to undertake a brief test. ‘Fine,’ says the Irishman. ‘OK then,’ says the foreman. ‘First up, can you tell me the difference between a joist and a girder?’ ‘That’s easy,’ the Irishman replies. ‘Joyce wrote Ulysses and Goethe wrote Faust.’

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best Irish joke ever.
I don't get it.
Don't try, Ummmm....it's really not worth it......I think someone Irish has annoyed DT and he wants a little dig...... ;-)
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nope, not at all, Gness.....
The punchline is so opposite to what one expects from an Irish joke I find it quite clever. Isn't it a compliment?
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I thought the same way, Prudie, a nice play on words.
Foreman tought he was tick....
I like it.
It is a compliment.
Then he asked him to construct a sentence with 'fascinate' in and Paddy said, 'Oive a new donkey jacket with nine buttons but I only fasten eight'.
"That's easy", the Irishman replies. "A girder is a beam of steel, wood, or reinforced concrete, used as a main horizontal support in a building or structure whereas a joist is a piece of timber laid horizontally, or nearly so, to which the planks of the floor, or the laths or furring strips of a ceiling, are nailed." The Irishman was a fully qualified builder and the foreman employed him straightaway.
I did get it really :-)
it's an anti-irish-joke joke. I like it.

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