Dad Jokes
Description
This is a community for sharing those cheesy “dad” jokes that invoke an eye roll or chuckle.
Rules
- Clean jokes only please. If you cannot tell this joke to a 5-year-old, you probably shouldn’t post it here. Please post edgier jokes to [email protected]
- Must post text, image (e.g., meme), or direct link. Do not post external links that cannot be viewed directly from the community (e.g., link to joke website, Facebook, Instagram, etc.)
- Follow Lemmy.World Code of Conduct
Who let the dogs bowl
at first i though this was talking about the Puppy Bowl that is broadcasted before the superb owl, and yes, it is something that everyone should watch
It used to be at the same time, so you'd have to choose between the two
You know which one I was more interested in
Wait, if it's not providing a better alternative to the sportsball then what even is the point?
Hey Nico, it's your dog, let's go bowling
Aw shit. Here we go again.
Time flies like an arrow
Fruit flies like a banana
You'd think they'd like grapes more.
Are you talking about fruit flies or time flies?
Non native so maybe it just gets lost, but I don't get it?
Is the error that the possessive 's is missing at 'dogs' ? If so, then its plural... I don't get it ^^'
Have you seen the bowl belonging to the dog? (The intended question of the asker. You're right, it's missing the possessive.)
vs.
Have you seen the dogs bowling? (The dad's perfect misinterpretation.)
Yep, that's it. This way "bowl" becomes a verb and the sentence means "Have you seen the dogs play bowling?".
You're on the right track. The possessive 's is missing which would make it the bowl of the dog (as intended). The way it is written, "bowl" could be a verb as in "have you seen the dogs when they bowl". Hope that makes sense and I'm a non native myself so not 100% sure myself
Yes, they forgot the apostrophe, so the Dad took "Have you seen the dogs bowl?" to mean "Have you seen the dogs go bowling?"
While that gives the response more legitimacy, dads don't actually care about the grammar and will make a smart ass response just based on how the question sounds.
Oohhh OK, now I get it. I was missing that 'bowl' is short for bowling.
It's not short for bowling (although it can be expressed like that too), it's the infinitive form of the verb, to bowl. "Have you seen the birds fly?"
You could also read it as a vowel.
(in bowling) to roll a ball along a smooth surface during a game of bowls or bowling
(in Cricket) to throw a ball towards a batsman (= the player who hits the ball) using a vertical circular movement of the arm while running:
It's his fault really, there's no apostrophe.
Dogs 'bowl?
m'bowl. Tips hat
That's silly. It's dogs b'owl.
the 'dog's bowl obviously
The ' is silent.
Only if the dogs have space worms.
Listen. If my dogs want space worms, I'm going to get them space worms.
If only there'd been an apostrophe....
Dad saw this as a teachable moment.
Dad, noticing the missing apostrophe
"Oh-ho, the game is afoot!"