I'm sure you and Stephen have a good reason to say it's a pun one way around and not the other, but I really don't see it... perhaps the pun is such a quintessentially English kind of humour that you all have nuances and subtleties to them that escape non-native speakers.
I'm referring to the bolded part. As a native English speaker, I'm genuinely curious if puns are common in other languages.
I read somewhere that many ancient Hebrew writings are full of wordplay, but I can't remember if that fact was supposed to be unusual or if it was common among various languages and texts.
"And it breaks my heart to look around, and see the unimpressed; who can't believe the emperor is dressed"~Fastball
2-7-1
2-7-1
A man walks into a bar
30/09/2012 12:55:15 PM
- 695 Views
Shouldn't the punchline be-
30/09/2012 07:04:15 PM
- 458 Views
How do you figure that?
30/09/2012 09:31:24 PM
- 406 Views
He's right
30/09/2012 10:30:01 PM
- 429 Views
Still don't get it.
30/09/2012 10:39:51 PM
- 467 Views
Is it?
01/10/2012 01:11:32 AM
- 543 Views
Three bearded men walk into a bar, wearing turbans...
30/09/2012 10:31:29 PM
- 455 Views