This. The answer to the question is the question itself.
When you cross a pirate and a bee, you get a whale.
"What do you get when you cross a cat with a pickle?" is an old, silly joke. The answer is that you get a picklepuss.
it's basically a trick question. you would think that there is some reason why the chicken is crossing the road but its actually the most simple answer - to get to the other side. its just a dumb joke and the whole point is to confuse you.
Joke: You get someone wearing Nobel bottoms. Serious: Jews can be hippies; there is nothing to cross.
Well, honey, a pig crossed the road joke is just like any other classic joke setup. It usually goes something like "Why did the pig cross the road? To prove he wasn't chicken!" Get it? Pigs, chickens, roads... it's all in good fun!
This is a rhetorical question. It's a joke that's been around for years.
Teach it commands in German rather than English. I think it was a joke or a rhetorical Question smile
You get a form of humor that playfully prompts the audience to think and engage with the punchline in a witty and unexpected way.
A rhetorical question is a question which doesn't require an answer.
Can you cross the highway safely when cars are going 75 miles per hour?
Rhetorical question
A rhetorical question.
a rhetorical question is a question that is not answeredso non-rhetorical would be the opposite. but everyone uses it wrong.
The term for answering a rhetorical question is "rhetorical assertion" or "rhetorical answer." It is used to make a point or emphasize a statement without expecting an actual response.
Is that a rhetorical question?
No. A rhetorical question is asked only for effect and no answer is expected.
a "rhetorical" question