Funny Wikipedia

Funny Wikipedia




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Funny Wikipedia
Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary
'Moved in where?' Sam asked Brona in confusion. 'What boyfriend?' 'Glen,' Brona said quietly. 'You met him a while ago, remember? He only moved in last week. I was going to tell you but [ … ] I thought you might be funny about it, that's all.'
Ash would have been happy to sit and stare at Viv all day, but when he saw the other guys staring at his sister, too, he got funny about it.

The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations .

After church I am met by a dear parishioner who says, "Got a funny for you. Father." Now I'll have "funnies," so I can reply. "Got one for you too, Mary!"
Everyone would be sitting on big fluffy white clouds singing songs, telling funnies and just enjoying the day.
Chic Young, who created his funny funny , “Blondie,” in 1930, and kept it the most popular comic strip in the world right through the unfunny generation, was quick to see the difference between the innocent funnies and the new generation of comics that started after the Second World War:
The artist gave priority to “Mark Trail,” usually spending at least eight hours a day on it, then working at night on “The Ryatts,” a funny that featured the foibles of a family much like his own, which included four children.
His father was more likely to listen to the radio, although he would read the Sunday funnies , and his grandmother would only read the Italian language paper she picked up at the corner candy store.
Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
Perhaps a jocular use of funny . See above.

Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)

Alabama: tasihmo
Arabic: مُضْحِك ‎ ( muḍḥik ) , هَزْلِيّ ‎ ( hazliyy )
Hijazi Arabic: يِضَحِّك ‎ ( yiḍaḥḥik )
Armenian: please add this translation if you can
Azerbaijani: gülməli (az) , əyləncəli , məzəli (az)
Belarusian: сме́шны ( smjéšny ) , заба́ўны ( zabáŭny ) , фацэ́тны ( facétny ) ( colloquial )
Bulgarian: смешен (bg) ( smešen ) , заба́вен (bg) ( zabáven )
Catalan: divertit (ca)
Chechen: беламе ( belame )
Chinese:
Mandarin: 可笑 (zh) ( kěxiào ) , 滑稽 (zh) ( huájī )
Cornish: hwarthus
Czech: legrační (cs) , zábavný (cs)
Danish: morsom , sjov (da)
Dutch: grappig (nl) , geinig (nl) , komiek (nl)
Esperanto: komika , amuza
Estonian: naljakas (et)
Faroese: skemtiligur , stuttligur
Finnish: hassu (fi) , hauska (fi) , hupaisa (fi) , huvittava (fi) , koominen (fi)
French: drôle (fr) , amusant (fr) , rigolo (fr) (familiar), marrant (fr) (familiar)
Galician: divertido m
Georgian: სასაცილო ( sasacilo )
German: komisch (de) , lustig (de) , spaßig (de)
Greek: αστείος (el) ( asteíos ) , διασκεδαστικός (el) ( diaskedastikós )
Haitian Creole: komik
Hebrew: מַצְחִיק ‎ m ( mats'khík )
Hindi: मज़ाक़िया ( mazāqiyā )
Hungarian: vicces (hu)
Icelandic: fyndinn m , skemmtilegur (is) m , hnyttinn m , smellinn m
Indonesian: lucu (id)
Irish: greannmhar
Italian: buffo (it) m , buffa (it) f , divertente (it) , esilarante (it)
Japanese: 面白い (ja) ( おもしろい, omoshiroi ) , 可笑しい (ja) ( おかしい, okashii )
Khmer: កំប្លែង (km) ( kɑmplaeng )
Korean: 우습다 (ko) ( useupda ) , 재미있다 (ko) ( jaemiitda )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: عەنتیکە ‎ ( 'entîke )


Laboya: kadiggi
Lao: please add this translation if you can
Latin: rīdiculus (la) , ioculāris
Latvian: jocīgs , smieklīgs
Lithuanian: please add this translation if you can
Louisiana Creole French: fars
Luxembourgish: komesch , lëschteg , spaasseg
Malay: kelakar (ms)
Mirandese: adbertido m , adbertida f
Mongolian: please add this translation if you can
Neapolitan: spassùso
Nepali: हाँसोउठ्दो ( hā̃souṭhdo ) , हाँसोलाग्दो ( hā̃solāgdo )
Norman: draole ( Guernsey )
Norwegian: artig (no)
Bokmål: morsom (no) , gøy (no)
Nynorsk: morosam
Persian: مسخره ‎ (fa) ( masxare ) , مضحک ‎ (fa) ( mozhek ) , خنده‌دار ‎ (fa) ( xandedâr ) , کمیک ‎ (fa) ( komik )
Plautdietsch: lajchrich , sposich
Polish: zabawny (pl) m , śmieszny (pl)
Portuguese: engraçado (pt) , divertido (pt)
Romanian: caraghios (ro) , amuzant (ro) m
Russian: смешно́й (ru) ( smešnój ) , заба́вный (ru) m ( zabávnyj ) , прико́льный (ru) ( prikólʹnyj )
Scottish Gaelic: èibhinn , àbhachdach
Slovak: smiešny , zábavný
Spanish: divertido (es) , cómico (es) , gracioso (es) , chistoso (es)
Swedish: rolig (sv) , komisk (sv) , lustig (sv) , skojig (sv)
Thai: ตลก (th) ( dtà-lòk )
Tibetan: please add this translation if you can
Turkish: komik (tr) , gülünç (tr)
Ukrainian: смішни́й ( smišnýj ) , куме́дний ( kumédnyj ) , заба́вний ( zabávnyj )
Uyghur: كۈلكىلىك ‎ ( külkilik )
Uzbek: kulguli
Vietnamese: buồn cười (vi) , ngồ ngộ (vi) , khôi hài (vi)
Welsh: doniol (cy) , digrif (cy)
Westrobothnian: lostälä
White Hmong: please add this translation if you can
Zhuang: please add this translation if you can


Alabama: sobayhíkko
Bulgarian: странен (bg) ( stranen ) , особен (bg) ( osoben )
Danish: sjov (da) , besynderlig , underlig
Dutch: eigenaardig (nl) , raar (nl) , zeldzaam (nl) , merkwaardig (nl) , vreemd (nl) , bizar (nl)
Faroese: serur , løgin , undarligur
Finnish: kummallinen (fi) , outo (fi) , hassu (fi)
French: étrange (fr) , marrant (fr) (familiar), bizarre (fr)
Galician: estraño (gl) m
German: komisch (de) , merkwürdig (de) , seltsam (de) , eigenartig (de)
Indonesian: aneh (id)
Italian: inconsueto (it) , strano (it)
Japanese: 変 (ja) ( へん, hen )
Korean: 이상하다 (ko) ( isanghada )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: عەجایەب ‎ ( 'ecayeb ) , سەیر ‎ ( seyr )


Latvian: jocīgs
Louisiana Creole French: dròl , drol , fars
Luxembourgish: komesch , droleg , aartlech , gelungen
Malay: pelik (ms)
Neapolitan: curàùso
Norwegian: rar (no) , merkelig (no)
Ojibwe: mayagi-
Portuguese: estranho (pt)
Romanian: caraghios (ro)
Russian: стра́нный (ru) ( stránnyj ) , прико́льный (ru) ( prikólʹnyj )
Spanish: extraño (es) , raro (es) , inusual (es)
Swedish: konstig (sv) , märklig (sv) , underlig (sv) , sällsam (sv)
Turkish: tuhaf (tr) , acayip (tr)
Vietnamese: là lạ


Neapolitan: (please verify ) strévezo


Alabama: afaahilka
Bulgarian: шега (bg) ( šega ) , виц (bg) m ( vic )
Dutch: grap (nl) , mop (nl) , grol (nl)
Finnish: vitsi (fi)


French: blague (fr) f
Icelandic: brandari (is) m
Italian: scherzo (it)
Neapolitan: jacuèlla


Mailboxes You Would Get If You Had a House
Updated October 13, 2018 5.4k votes 1.1k voters 39.4k views
Vote up the Wikipedia hacks the Trump cabinet definitely took notes on.
Wikipedia is the Internet's most amazing source of information and your high school teacher's greatest nemesis. But it's also the world's foremost not-for-profit source of Internet trolling and factual vandalism . It just goes to show that everything on the Internet should be taken with a grain of salt, and a side of cats . Below you will witness notable Wikipedia hacks and edits that are way funnier than the actual truth. After all, alternative facts are in now.
Wiki, Wiki, Wiki can't you see? Sometimes your hacks just hypnotize me.

Part of HuffPost News. ©2022 BuzzFeed, Inc. All rights reserved.
Wikipedia turns 14 years old on Thursday!
Jan 14, 2015, 12:20 PM EST | Updated Dec 6, 2017
Wake up to the day's most important news.
Он начинал пол года назад, всего с 200$...
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Wikipedia turns 14 years old on Thursday! So we thought we'd pay tribute to what has become one of the world’s most comprehensive sources of obscure information by pointing out the weirdest and funniest pages on the site.
It’s hard to articulate what makes a Wikipedia page one of the greats. Maybe it’s easiest to say it’s sort of like pornography: You just know it when you see it. Nevertheless, we've compiled an admittedly subjective list of some of the most absurd entries on Wikipedia, without too much regard for how “accurate” they might be -- thanks in part to a Wikipedia page entitled “Wikipedia:Unusual articles.” Enjoy!
"Lists of lists of lists." Just what it says, but five times better than it sounds. "List of common misconceptions." Everything you know is a lie. Well, almost everything.
"Year 10,000 problem." “[A]lso known as the Y10K problem.”
"Argel Fucks." A retired Brazilian soccer player who once inspired the headline "Fucks off to Benfica.”
"Inherently funny word." Some words are just funny, OK?
"List of Kim Jong-il's titles." Includes notable nicknames like “Party Center” and “The Great Sun of Life.”
"The Matrix Defense." This isn’t even the real world, man. How can I actually commit a crime?
"Longest word in English." There is a word that’s 189,819 letters long. It’s the chemical name of titin, the largest known protein.
"List of people who have lived at airports." One man lived in an airport for more than 17 YEARS after he was exiled from Iran and his documents were stolen. His story was the basis for the Tom Hanks movie “The Terminal.”
"List of animals with fraudulent diplomas." “Oreo C. Collins (born around 2007) is a tuxedo cat who gained notoriety when she received a diploma from Jefferson High School Online in 2009, although her age was misrepresented in order to qualify.”
"Death by coconut." A surprisingly long list.
"Execution by elephant." This is an actual thing that people used to do.
"Fan death." Some people think you’ll die if you sit in a closed room with an electric fan. You won’t.
"List of animals displaying homosexual behavior." Among those who make the list: Bears, rats, bison, cats, dogs, elephants, foxes, giraffes. You get the idea.
"Buttered cat paradox." “Cats always land on their feet. Buttered toast always lands buttered side down.” So what happens when you put some buttered toast on a cat?
"Toilet paper orientation." Over is correct. Under is wrong. Get over it.
"The Truman Show delusion." Some people think they’re being filmed 24/7.
"Uncombable hair syndrome." A bad hair day. Every day.
"Sex in space." Everything you ever wanted to know about sex but were too afraid to ask astronauts.
"Cosmic latte." The “name assigned to the average color of the universe, given by a team of astronomers from Johns Hopkins University.” Are you not entertained?
"Mike the Headless Chicken." This chicken lived for 18 months after his head had been cut off.
"Spongiforma squarepantsii." "The name of the fungus is derived from the cartoon character SpongeBob SquarePants.”
"Hoover (seal)." He could speak!!!!
"Evil clown." Complete with a long list of evil clowns throughout history.
"For sale: baby shoes, never worn." The shortest (and saddest) novel ever.
"4’33”." A piece of music that involves all the musicians just silently holding their instruments.
"As Slow As Possible." “The performance of the organ version at St. Burchardi church in Halberstadt, Germany, began in 2001 and is scheduled to have a duration of 640 years, ending in 2640.”
"Cigarettes and Valentines." The Green Day album that was stolen from the studio and never to be heard of again.
"Dark Side of the Rainbow." If you line up Dark Side of the Moon and The Wizard of Oz, some trippy, trippy stuff happens, man.
"List of music considered the worst." Somehow only one Nickelback song makes the list.
"McDonald's urban legends." “One belief is that McDonald's uses cow eyeballs in its products, permitting it to brand them as ‘100% beef.’”
"Unusually shaped vegetable." Obviously, most of them look like they have penises.
" Snail racing." “The track usually takes the form of a damp cloth atop a table.”
"Global Orgasm." Was supposed to happen on Dec. 22, 2006. Fortunately, it did not.
"Nix v. Hedden." In 1893, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a tomato is a vegetable, not a fruit. Yet the debate rages on.
"Lawsuits against God." One of the lawsuits “was dismissed because God could not be properly notified, not having an address.” "Wicked Bible." An infamous 1631 version of the Bible that accidentally included the commandment “Thou shalt commit adultery.”



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Jamie founded Listverse due to an insatiable desire to share fascinating, obscure, and bizarre facts. He has been a guest speaker on numerous national radio and television stations and is a five time published author.
People like to read funny and bizarre encyclopedia entries. History is full of strange people, objects and ideas that will make you laugh. Wikipedia has provided the Internet with a platform to share information. In this article, we will examine a combination of bizarre Wikipedia pages and funny concepts. Comedy can be a difficult emotion to capture. For this reason, you rarely see funny posts. Some of the entries in this article are more shocking than comedic, but hopefully something will make you smile.
Did you just hear that? It sounded like my cell phone was ringing. Phantom rings are the sensation and false belief that one can hear their mobile phone ringing, or feel it vibrating, when in fact the telephone is not doing so. Humans are particularly sensitive to auditory tones between the range of 1,000 and 6,000 hertz. All basic cell phone rings fall within this range. For this reason, people often experience ringxiety when using a loud device, such as a hair dryer, watching television or taking a shower. How many times have you been blow drying your hair and suddenly turned off the device and checked your cell phone for a phantom call or text.
For humans, a cell phone frequency is difficult to locate spatially, and can cause confusion when heard from a distance. False vibrations are less well understood. In an interesting correlation, mothers have also reported a phantom sound of babies crying. This brings to light a social interaction factor. Studies have indicated that an intense need for contact, such as that experienced during a period of extended isolation may produce a similar phantom noise effect. In modern times, some doorbells and telephone ringers are modeled after nature. This can create confusion for people when traveling in a rural area with the same sound.
In the 1930s, American students began the bizarre fad of goldfish swallowing. The practice was characterized by swallowing a live goldfish. In the 1940s, goldfish swallowing was replaced by telephone booth stuffing. In this fad, adolescents would cram themselves into telephone booths. In many cases, as many as 25 students managed to enter a standard telephone booth. Telephone booth stuffing was a great fad, but the practice was finished by 1959. Other common fads during this time in history included hunkerin’ on the balls of your feet, streaking and panty raids. In 1948, the first panty raid was carried out at Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois.
A panty raid is a prank in which a large collection of college men sneak into a women’s dormitory room and steal some of their panties. By the end of 1952, panty raids were common in American schools and the fad spread to over 52 campuses. In many cases, the women loved the attention and cheered on the men. They opened up their doors and tossed out lingerie. In response to the raid, the women would often times organize their own counterattack. Panty raids functioned as a humorous protest against curfews and restrictions that barred male visitors from women’s dormitories. By the 1970s, the implementation of mixed dorms created a decline in panty raids. The prank made a strong comeback in the middle of the 1980s with the release of the comedy film Revenge of the Nerds, which holds a classic panty raid scene.
Jeju Loveland is an outdoor sculpture park on Jeju Island in South Korea, that opened in 2004. Love Land is a place where love oriented art and eroticism can unite. The park focuses on the theme of sex. It holds a collection of educational films, and features 140 sculptures that represent the human body in various sexual positions. The park is famous for a collection of hands-on exhibits, such as a masturbation cycle. It holds many famous statues, including large a penis and stone labia. After the Korean War, Jeju Island became a popular honeymoon destination for Korean couples, due to the island’s warm climate.
The park was constructed to accommodate the needs of Korean couples, and to entertain foreign travelers. You must be at least 18-years-old to enter the park. A separate play area is available for children and minors. Love Land is a great example of a sex museum. It was constructed to educate the public on the natural process of sexual intercourse. However, it appears that the information is too intense for some federal governments. In 2009, the PRC Government canceled the construction of a sex park in Chongqing. The facility was scheduled to become the first educational sex park in China. In May of 2009, the Chongqing sex park was demolished. It was deemed to have a negative influence on the Chinese society.
Fritz Peterson is a former Major League Baseball player. From 1966-1976, Peterson was a starting pitcher for a collection of MLB teams. He enjoyed his most successful season in 1970, when Peterson was 20-11 for the Yankees. During the final game at Yankee Stadium on Sunday, September 21, 2008, ESPN Sports announced that the pitcher with the lowest all-time earned run average at Yankee Stadium was Fritz Peterson, with a 2.52 ERA. Today, Peterson in perhaps most remembered for the circumstances surrounding a bizarre d
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