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[Simple Riddles] A curated selection of fun questions that will excite everyone from kids to adults!

A must-see for anyone looking for wordplay riddles that adults can enjoy! In this article, we present intellectually witty riddles that will make you chuckle, in a fun quiz format.

From works that delight with clever wordplay to ones that make you pause and think.

Simple yet profound—enjoy the world of riddles.

These amusing riddles are perfect for sparking conversation during office breaks or at parties.

For a mental workout or as conversation starters, find your favorite riddles!

For Kids! Simple Riddle Collection (1–10)

What do you get when you compare “karaoke” to a “library”? What’s the punchline?

What do you get when you compare “karaoke” to a “library”? What’s the punchline?
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We provide lyrics (lyric display/loan service).

When you think about what a noisy karaoke place and a quiet library have in common, it feels tricky, doesn’t it? Karaoke is where you “display lyrics” so everyone can sing, and a library is where they “lend out” books. From “kashi-dashi” (displaying lyrics) and “kashi-dashi” (lending out), the answer to the riddle is “kashidashimasu.”

What do you get when you cross the rainy season with a pet? What’s the punchline?

What do you get when you cross the rainy season with a pet? What's the punchline?
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natsukimasu (summer comes / becomes attached)

The rainy season gives a strong impression of rain, but once it’s over, it’s the time when summer truly arrives, and pets, when treated with affection, grow attached to you, don’t they? So the riddle’s answer is “natsukimasu” as a shared point between the two. I think the tricky part is that you have to imagine not the rainy season itself, but what comes after it.

What do a “dry cleaner’s” and a “smile” have in common? The answer: they both make wrinkles disappear.

What do a “dry cleaner’s” and a “smile” have in common? The answer: they both make wrinkles disappear.
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Good fortune (and clothes) are coming.

At a dry cleaner’s, people bring in clothes they want to be made clean (fuku/’clothes’), and it’s said that good fortune (fuku/’luck’) comes to those who smile. From these two homophones, the answer is “fuku ga kimasu” (“fuku comes”). Since it’s hard to make the leap from a smile to good fortune, it might be better to start thinking from the cleaning angle.

What do you get when you compare a choir to a freezer? What’s the punchline?

What do you get when you compare a choir to a freezer? What's the punchline?
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It’s a chorus (and also “to freeze”).

We call choral singing “chorus.” And a freezer is something that “freezes” food. This is a riddle that plays on those two words.

Riddle: “What do Tokyo Disneyland and the letter B have in common?” Answer: “Both have two Ds.”

Riddle: “What do Tokyo Disneyland and the letter B have in common?” Answer: “Both have two Ds.”
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Next door is Sea (Shi/C).

This riddle’s answer is “the neighbor is Sea.” Tokyo Disneyland is next to DisneySea, and in the alphabet B is next to C—both share the idea that the neighbor is “C/Sea.” Since the answer isn’t the thing itself but its neighbor, it tests whether you can broaden your thinking that far.