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BREAKFAST TABLE FUN.

FUNNY DEFINITIONS. According to the Schoolmaster, ‘ stability ’ was recently defined as being * the cleaning up of a stable;’ and an answer to some question about insurance had his passage:—‘The money is provided by the company to defray expenses of the birth of members in pecuniary distress.’ In summer, it seems, ‘the day is longer owing to expansion by the heat ; ’ and that season itself is thus explained ‘ Once a year we have the whole bright side of the sun turned towards us. Then it is summer. The sun is in the solstice and stands still.’ ‘ What comes next to man in the scale of being ?’ inquired an examiner. ‘ His shirt ’ was the reply. Asked to give the distinction, if any, between a fort and a fortress, a boy nicely defined them :—‘A fort is a place to put men in, and a fortress is a place to put women in.’ On being asked what the chief end of man was, another boy, without any hesitation, said, ‘ The end what’s got his head on.’ A teacher asked a very juvenile class which of them had ever seen a magnet. A sharp urchin at once said he had seen lots of them. ‘ Where ?’ inquired the teacher, surprised at his proficiency. ‘ln the cheese.’ Being asked what conscience was, a boy replied, ‘An inward monitor.’ Asked what a monitor meant, the ready answer was, ‘An ironclad vessel.’ Another lad was asked what he understood by ‘ celerity,’ and, ‘ perhaps from experience,’ says the contemporary account, he described it as ‘ something to put hot plates down with.’

The members of a girls’ class were asked a few questions. One was interrogated as to what was meant by ‘ bearing false witness against your neighbor.’ ‘lt was,’ said she, 1 when nobody did nothing and somebody went and told of it.' Another waV asked how beef tea was made, and she replied, 1 Buy a tin of beef extract and follow the directions on the lid.’

1 What are warmth producing foods ?’ a third girl was asked. The the reply was, ‘ Cayenne pepper and and Jamaica ginger.' ‘ What is the the feminine of friar !’ asked a teacher of his class. First Boy—‘ Hasn’t any.’ ‘ Next?’ Second Boy—‘ Nun.' * That’s right,’ said the master. First Boy, in an indignant tone. 1 That’s just what I said.' * And now, dear,’ asked a governess, ‘ what can you tell me about Minerva ?’ ‘ She was the Goddess of Wisdom, and she never married,’ was the reply.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GSCCG18910905.2.17

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Gisborne Standard and Cook County Gazette, Volume V, Issue 655, 5 September 1891, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
417

BREAKFAST TABLE FUN. Gisborne Standard and Cook County Gazette, Volume V, Issue 655, 5 September 1891, Page 4

BREAKFAST TABLE FUN. Gisborne Standard and Cook County Gazette, Volume V, Issue 655, 5 September 1891, Page 4

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