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"Riddle" Riddles - Next 10 of 758.

Riddle: What do kids, worms, bears, fish, and rings alll have in common?
Answer: They are GUMIES!
Riddle: A single word which is versatile, it can be a letter, unknown to the problem, a variable, a target, a love, an intercept, and a type of chromosome. What am I?
Answer: X.
Riddle: Why do you paint eggs on easter?
Answer: It's a lot easier than wallpapering them!
Riddle: My shallow hills are the faces of kings. My horizon is always near. My music sends men to the grave. My absence sends men to work. What am I?
Answer: Coins.
Riddle: In the land of forgotten past, where logic falters and chaos lasts, I whisper quietly through the veil, a cryptic message, delicate and frail. First, you'll seek the titan's home, where footsteps dwindle in silver foam. A cosmic dance of two in sync, their secret lies within the brink. Second, venture to the ancient tale, where elements meet and logic fails. The fifth in line, a metal's pride, with water's touch, it must divide. Third, within the sequence known, a pattern's end, infinitely grown. The first to break, the last to stay, it marches on, in ordered sway. Combine these three, a code is made; the answer hidden, a secret shade. Now, solve the riddle, if you dare, and seek the answer, hidden where?
Answer: "A cosmic dance of two in sync" refers to Janus and Epimetheus, two moons of Saturn that share the same orbital path and swap positions, in what is sometimes referred to as a "cosmic dance." The fifth in line, a metal's pride, with water's touch, it must divide: The fifth element in the periodic table is Boron (B). It's a metalloid, so it shares properties with both metals and non-metals. Boron will react with water at high temperatures, dividing or breaking apart. The second clue points to Boron. The first to break, the last to stay, it marches on, in ordered sway: In the Fibonacci sequence, the first number to "break" the pattern is 4 because it doesn't fit the pattern of summing the two preceding numbers. This may be the third clue's answer. Combining these three answers, we get: Janus and Epimetheus, Boron, and 4. While this combination doesn't lead to a specific location or concept, we can interpret the riddle's last line: Combine these three, a code is made; the answer hidden, a secret shade. The riddle itself is the answer, a secret hidden in the veil of its cryptic language. The joy of the riddle lies in solving the clues and piecing together the puzzle. In this case, the destination is the journey itself.
Riddle: What do you call a leprechaun's vacation home?
Answer: A Lepre-condo.
Riddle: I can press without fingers, pull juice from fruit, or show you love with a short embrace. What am I?
Answer: Squeeze.  It’s a wordplay on the different meanings of “squeeze.” “Press without fingers” points to applying pressure in general (like squeezing a stress ball or a trigger). “Pull juice from fruit” is literal—squeezing an orange or lemon. “Show you love with a short embrace” nods to a quick affectionate hug often called “a squeeze.” All three clues converge on the action and noun “squeeze.”
Riddle: It has no top or bottom but it can hold flesh, bones, and blood all at the same time. What is it?
Answer: A ring.
Riddle: In a reality show, there is a challenge for choosing teams. There are ten contestants: Hannah, Ryan, Jenny, Debstep, Markus, Ernesto, Georgia, Florida, California, and Jackson. The last two contestants remaining will be team captains. Team A will have the people who failed according to odd numbers (e.g. first faller, third, fifth). Team B will be the evens. Here are the clues: Hannah fails after Debstep || Ryan fails before Markus || Markus fails before Ernesto || Debstep fails after Ernesto || Florida fails after Georgia || California fails before Jackson || Jackson fails before Georgia || Hannah fails before California || Jenny fails after Florida. Who are the teams and who are the captains?
Answer: * = captain Team A: Florida*, Jackson, Hannah, Ernesto, Ryan Team B: Jenny*, Georgia, California, Debstep, Markus
Riddle: An apple is $.40, a banana is $.60, and a grapefruit is $.80.  How much is a pear?
Answer: Answer: each vowel costs $0.20.apple (a, e) = 2 vowels → $0.40banana (a, a, a) = 3 → $0.60grapefruit (a, e, u, i) = 4 → $0.80pear (e, a) = 2 → $0.40