Pearls Before Swine by Stephan Pastis for June 21, 2015

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    BE THIS GUY  over 9 years ago

    Now, this guy is just messing with Pig.

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    Templo S.U.D.  over 9 years ago

    Mr. Patsis, the British spelling is “litre.” Nice semi-pun, by the way.

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    aardvarkseyes  over 9 years ago

    He’s an imposter! The British spell it “litre!”

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    salakfarm Premium Member over 9 years ago

    Pastis, the world’s best/worst punster/

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    favm  over 9 years ago

    @ Templo S.U.D. – Sometimes you have to force your pun.

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    Sherlock Watson  over 9 years ago

    This one ranks high on the laugh-metre.

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    Bilan  over 9 years ago

    Just don’t tell Pig to put the gas in the boot.

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    knight1192a  over 9 years ago

    Sick joke.

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    spikelovesmusic  over 9 years ago

    As someone once remarked to Schubert,“Take us to your Lieder.”

    (borrowed from Tom Lehrer)

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    PICTO  over 9 years ago

    I thought the British word for “gas” was “breaking wind”.

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    Sisyphos  over 9 years ago

    Since Cartoon-Boy is published in the USA, the spelling of litre was “corrected” to confirm to local norms. But the joke is aural for Pig, who is predictably caught up in the Aliens Among Us delusion and takes the required comedic pratfall….

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    grampianlothian  over 9 years ago

    I’m a-gassed (aghast) at the forced pun here…….

    Well I did try. No worse than some of stephan’s puns!

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    Arianne  over 9 years ago

    If the guy was German- Canadian instead of British, we could say he was litre hosin’ Pig.

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    Claire Jordan  over 9 years ago

    Although the breaking wind one was originally spelled vert. That’s why “buck verteth” is one of the signs of summer listed in the 13th C poem “Summer is Icumen in”.

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    Jonathan Mason  over 9 years ago

    No sh** Sherlock

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    Jonathan Mason  over 9 years ago

    Nothing wrong with the word fart, except to prudish American ears

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    Jonathan Mason  over 9 years ago

    A British man of the age alluded to in the cartoon would still refer to petrol in gallons. It’s only the younger generations who use metric more than Imperial.

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    whiteheron  over 9 years ago

    Goat proudly exclaims, " I’ve got gas!".

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    juicebruce  over 9 years ago

    What if we put a second “T” in liter ?

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    mammamoonbeam  over 9 years ago

    Reading these comments is almost as much fun as reading PBS! Pastis certainly has an erudite and articulate following!

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    kwschatz  over 9 years ago

    That’s 2/3 of a pun. P U.

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    NeedaChuckle Premium Member over 9 years ago

    I had to read it a couple of times to get the drift. It was a stretch.

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    Stocky One  over 9 years ago

    You mean my wife? Trust me, you wouldn’t want to metre…

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    Packratjohn Premium Member over 9 years ago

    Reminds me of the Brit who visited the US. He rented a car and was touring when the car started giving him problems. He pulled into a garage for help. The mechanic looked over the problem and said, “It just needs a little elbow grease”…. whereupon the Brit said, “Great, give me two liters”.

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    A_NY_Outlaw  over 9 years ago

    those Brits are crazy.

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    Pointspread  over 9 years ago

    Do you think this is a one time pun or Pastis will try to get more mileage out of it?

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    ThumperMcDuff  over 9 years ago

    My British cousin would ask, “Litre? How much is that in old money?”

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    abbybookcase  over 9 years ago

    some years ago, (30?) a friend was entertaining a british visitor. they were in a restaurant(you could still smoke &dine) and she offered him a cigarette. he said no thank you, maybe later. after getting through more of the meal he said, i’ll have that f-g now, if you don’t mind. she was somewhat taken aback till she realized what was being said. as george bernard shaw said,england &america are 2 countries separated by the same language

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    ChessPirate  over 9 years ago

    “Litre? I didn’t even metre!”

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    Number Three  over 9 years ago

    Why do some Americans think that we British people are from another planet?

    As much as I enjoy American humour (not humor) I just felt like asking that question.

    xxx

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    RG_Dustbin  over 9 years ago

    In many cases the ‘wrong’ yankee spelling is more true to the spelling from England three hundred or more years ago. Quite a few of the odd British spellings (favour, color, humour for example) only stem from Victorian days when the spelling was formalised in what they felt was a more ‘refined’ way.

    Also in many cases it was only in the same Victorian days that ‘rude’ word in English actually became ‘rude’!

    As to English weather -we have that in lieu of climate, and for English cuisine our bread is the best in the world if you make sure of staying a good bargepole distance clear of the Chorleywood process rubbish!

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    jerylkohjx348  over 9 years ago

    It’s like the chips-crisps confusion all over again!

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    mytly4  over 9 years ago

    The British pronunciation of ‘litre’ would not sound like ‘leader’.

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    fredd13  over 9 years ago

    Yeah, but in Britain we elide those words rather less than the US does. (Never seen the point of that, personally. If you already know the word I’m writing, how does my simply spelling it correctly somehow make it more offensive? What are you – six, or something?)

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