Why Can't We Deal With Shop Lifting?
News0 min ago
If anyone can solve this and let me know the answer, I'll mention you in my will! It's driving me crazy!!!
There are three words in the English language that end in 'gry'.
ONE is angry and the other is hungry.
EveryONE knows what the third ONE means and what it stands for.
EveryONE uses them everyday and if you listened very carefully, I've given you the third word.
What is it? _______gry?
I'm sure the clue is in the 'ONE' - why else would it have to be in capitals?
Please let me know if you get it - before I go insane!
loonuman
No best answer has yet been selected by numan. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.its a trick question. check out what i found online:
In its proper, original form, the first two sentences have absolutely nothing to do with the question: "Think of words ending in -GRY. Angry and hungry are two of them." Ignore those two sentences. They are there only to throw you off course. (And it worked, didn't it?) What's left is the actual riddle itself: "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."
The key is the phrase "the English language." In this three-word phrase, the third word is simply the word "language." Get it? "Language" is definitely something that "everyone uses every day"! Without that quirky little twist, the puzzle would be just another trivia question, not a riddle.
I've cheated.....I looked it up
aggry: Coloured and variegated glass beads of ancient manufacture, found buried in the ground in Africa. A word of unknown origin. Seemingly always used attributively, as in aggry beads.
braggry: A variant form of braggery. Obsolete.
conyngry: An obsolete dialectal variant of conyger, itself an obsolete term meaning �rabbit warren�.
gry: The smallest unit in Locke�s proposed decimal system of linear measurement, being the tenth of a line, the hundredth of an inch, and the thousandth of a (�philosophical�) foot. Also the grunt of a pig, an insignificant trifle, or a verb meaning to roar. Obsolete.
iggry: Egyptian colloquial Arabic pronunciation of ijri: �Hurry up!�, brought back after the First World War by members of British and Australian forces who had fought in Egypt.
meagry: Having a meagre appearance. Obsolete.
nangry: A variant form of angry. Obsolete.
podagry: Dodder, or the condition of a plant infested with it.
puggry: A variant form of puggree, a light turban or head-covering worn by inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent.
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