Riddle: I always come in second, but I always finish sooner than anyone else. What am I?
Answer: February.
Riddle: Hidden in the poem below, a manly name you'll seek; just read and listen to the rhyme, but please, don't take a week! MYSTERY POEM: I do not mind addition; I'll tolerate subtraction; but try not to increase my stress, by tossing in those fractions. I'll multiply and then divide, and figure out those sums; but modern math --- the math you use, just makes me want some Tums. What is the man's name you hear in the rhyme?
Answer: The name you'll hear is MATTHEW.
Riddle: I possess a halo of water, walls of stone, and a tongue of wood. Long I have stood; what am I?
Answer: A castle.
Riddle: What's a snowman's favorite food?
Answer: A Brrrr-ger.
Riddle: I only persist when I cease, Keep many form being at ease. I grow though not sown, Am had but not own'd, Which man neither holds nor he sees. What am I?
Answer: Age.
Riddle: No legs or two legs, four legs or more, the color of green, on Terra it stays. Teeming with chemicals of darkness and light, needing only a wind, a breath to lift the kite. What is it?
Answer: Life.
Riddle: What do grape students do when they have a question?
Answer: Raisin their hand!
Riddle: You entered a Formula 1 race and are starting last of the 20 cars. By the final lap, you are in first place, passing all 20 cars. But this is actually not possible. Why?
Answer: There are 20 cars including yourself. You can’t pass yourself.
Riddle: What moves around the world has several destinations but only one stop and full of energy?
Answer: The riddle "What moves around the world has several destinations" is unanswered. Do you know the answer? If so, click ANSWER and add your answer in the comments section.
Riddle: A retired couple had just completed construction on a brand new house. The husband had worked in construction, and his wife had been an interior decorator, so the finished house looked great. They were so proud of their new house, they invited their 12 grandchildren over to see it. Within an hour of their visit, however, the 12 children had broken several windows, pulled decorations from the walls, smashed parts of the white fence surrounding the house, and somehow even managed to destroy parts of the new roof. Shockingly, the retired couple did not try to set any behavioral limits on their grandchildren, and in fact, were observed smiling and laughing as their grandchildren inflicted damage on the house the couple had so carefully created together. Has the world gone mad? What kind of insanity was going on here?
Answer: The retired couple had constructed a small gingerbread house for their grandchildren, and invited them over to eat it.