A door knocker in Spain (Wikipedia) |
Note: "Knock Knock!" "Who's there?" "Buzz!" "Buzz who?" Learn how to tell, reply to, and understand this classic form of joke.
Get Ready: Do you know any "Knock Knock" jokes? If so, tell a few.
Every culture has some fixed forms for jokes. Let's take a look at some of these in this lesson and #01-099 and #01-100.
The classical "Knock Knock" joke is based on a Question-and-Answer format that both parties must know. As you can see (hear?), it's based on terrible puns: jokes based on words that sound the same or similar. It almost always goes like this:
A: Knock Knock.
B: Who's there?
A: [line]
B: [line] who?
A: [punch line]
Here are a few examples:
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Wooden shoe.
B: Wooden shoe who?
A: Wooden shoe like to know! ["Wooden shoe" sounds like "Wouldn't you"]
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Orange.
B: Orange who?
A: Orange you going to open the door? ["Orange you" sounds like "Aren't you"]
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Ammonia.
B: Ammonia who?
A: Ammonia little girl and I can't reach the bell. ["Ammonia" sounds like "I'm only a"]
Sometimes the humor comes from the required use of "who" in the fourth line:
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Boo.
B: Boo who?
A: Don't cry. ["Boo who" sounds like "Boo hoo," an imitation of a crying sound.]
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: What goes.
B: What goes who?
A: An owl goes "who"! ["Who" is the sound owls make, like bees go "buzz" and cows go "moo."]
Another form of Knock Knock joke relies on the use of a person's name:
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Doris.
B: Doris who?
A: Doris locked. That's why I knocked! ["Doris" sounds like "Door is"]
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Al.
B: Al who?
A: Al give you a dollar if you open this door! ["Al" sounds like "I'll"]
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Denise.
B: Denise who?
A: Denise are above de ankles! ["Denise" sounds like "The knees"]
And another popular form leads to the opening words of a song:
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Iguana.
B: Iguana who?
A: Iguana hold your hand. ["Iguana" sounds like "I wanna" from the Beatles' song "I Want to Hold Your Hand."]
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Mayonnaise.
B: Mayonnaise who?
A: Mayonnaise have seen the glory... ["Mayonnaise" sounds like "Mine eyes" from "The Battle Hymn of the Republic"]
Sometimes you can combine forms. Here we have people's names and a song:
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Jose.
B: Jose who?
A: Jose can you see... ["Jose" sounds like "Oh, say" from the American National Anthem.]
A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Sam and Janet.
B: Sam and Janet who?
A: Sam and Janet evening... ["Sam and Janet" sounds like "Some enchanted"; "Some Enchanted Evening" is a song from the musical South Pacific.]
Had enough? One more:
--------A: Knock knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Dummy.
B: Dummy who?
A: Dummy a favor and keep studying these lessons! ["Dummy" sounds like "Do me"]
Read more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knock-knock_joke
Practice: Match the third line (like "Dummy" above) to the fifth, but with the correct spelling (like "Do me a favor...") But be careful: some are tricky!
- Annie
- dishes
- hatch
- hike
- lettuce
- Odysseus
- pecan
- spell
- tennis
- wa
- Oh, this is the last straw!
- Let us in, we're cold out here!
- What are you so excited about?!
- God bless you!
- I didn't know you liked Japanese poems!
- Anything you can do I can better!
- Ten is five plus five!
- Pick on someone your own size.
- W-H-O!
- This is the police, open up!
Now put them together, like this (using #1, "Annie"):
A: Knock Knock.
B: Who's there?
A: Annie
B: Annie who?
A: Anything you can do I can better!
Answers are in the first comment below.
Submitted to the Shenzhen Daily for April 15, 2008
Answers to the Practice: 1. f; 2. j; 3. d (sounds like a sneeze: "Achoo!"); 4. e (sounds like "haiku," a kind of Japanese poem); 5. b; 6. a; 7. h; 8. i (sounds like the speaker asked the person to spell "who"); 9. g; 10. c (sounds like an excited sound, "Wahoo!")
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