I'm referring to the bolded part. As a native English speaker, I'm genuinely curious if puns are common in other languages.
In the other languages I'm most familiar with (that would be primarily Dutch, French, Spanish), it's not that there is no wordplay, but if somebody starts telling jokes, they're not going to be pun jokes of the "a man walks into a bar" variety. Puns as a genre are much rarer in those languages, or so it seems to me. It's entirely possible that one of the reasons why they're so prominent in English, is the absurdly complicated orthography of English and the countless instances of differently spelled homonyms or near-homonyms. Or it could just be a tradition that someone started and lots of people followed.
A man walks into a bar
30/09/2012 12:55:15 PM
- 694 Views
Shouldn't the punchline be-
30/09/2012 07:04:15 PM
- 457 Views
How do you figure that?
30/09/2012 09:31:24 PM
- 405 Views
He's right
30/09/2012 10:30:01 PM
- 428 Views
Still don't get it.
30/09/2012 10:39:51 PM
- 466 Views
Is it?
01/10/2012 01:11:32 AM
- 542 Views
Let me put it this way...
01/10/2012 07:00:58 PM
- 399 Views
Three bearded men walk into a bar, wearing turbans...
30/09/2012 10:31:29 PM
- 454 Views