Strange letter puzzle [duplicate]
This question already has an answer here:
What is the solution?
4 answers
What has $4$ letters, sometimes $9$ letters, always $6$ letters and never $5$ letters. How?
Hint: $4$ letters
word wordplay
marked as duplicate by Bass, rhsquared, Glorfindel, Chowzen, athin Jan 1 at 11:48
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
What is the solution?
4 answers
What has $4$ letters, sometimes $9$ letters, always $6$ letters and never $5$ letters. How?
Hint: $4$ letters
word wordplay
marked as duplicate by Bass, rhsquared, Glorfindel, Chowzen, athin Jan 1 at 11:48
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
What is the solution?
4 answers
What has $4$ letters, sometimes $9$ letters, always $6$ letters and never $5$ letters. How?
Hint: $4$ letters
word wordplay
This question already has an answer here:
What is the solution?
4 answers
What has $4$ letters, sometimes $9$ letters, always $6$ letters and never $5$ letters. How?
Hint: $4$ letters
This question already has an answer here:
What is the solution?
4 answers
word wordplay
word wordplay
edited Jan 3 at 10:58
boboquack
15k145115
15k145115
asked Jan 1 at 6:43


Mohammad Zuhair KhanMohammad Zuhair Khan
1336
1336
marked as duplicate by Bass, rhsquared, Glorfindel, Chowzen, athin Jan 1 at 11:48
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by Bass, rhsquared, Glorfindel, Chowzen, athin Jan 1 at 11:48
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Well; for a start:
The word "what" itself has four letters, the word "sometimes" has nine, the word "always" has six letters and the word "never" has five. So...
What has $4$ letters, sometimes $9$ letters, always $6$ letters and never $5$ letters. How? $3$ letters!
* worth noting that this was entirely @WAF in the comments.
You got the trick, but how?
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:54
Think literally
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:59
4
Maybe just apply the same rule to the bold word as well.
– WAF
Jan 1 at 7:05
@WAF good thought — why didn't I think of that? If it's correct, I owe you.
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 7:34
Heh. It's all yours! Always happy to collaborate.
– WAF
Jan 2 at 6:12
add a comment |
I kind of second Hugh's answer, but with a slight addition. What's in the question's body isn't really a question. It's a statement. What has 4 letters, sometimes 9 letters, always 6 letters and never 5 letters. It's just a count of the number of letters in each word succeeding the comma. This is like a guide/legend to answer the real question.
The real question
lies in the title ==> But, how is this possible?
The answer:
Taking the prototype in the statement given above... this has 4 letters. That is how THIS is possible. In other words... the answer to How is THIS possible?
1
Ha, lol. I should havs got that. Well done
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 15:21
1
Ummm... It was actually about "How"... A really good conclusion but the fact that the title wasn't allowing me less than 15 characters. I am sorry
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 16:23
1
"How?" is a question. it implies How about "how"?
– Ahmed Abdelhameed
Jan 2 at 7:37
I get it now @MohammadZuhairKhan. I took the title in the literal way.. good one though
– Rai
Jan 3 at 10:45
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Well; for a start:
The word "what" itself has four letters, the word "sometimes" has nine, the word "always" has six letters and the word "never" has five. So...
What has $4$ letters, sometimes $9$ letters, always $6$ letters and never $5$ letters. How? $3$ letters!
* worth noting that this was entirely @WAF in the comments.
You got the trick, but how?
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:54
Think literally
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:59
4
Maybe just apply the same rule to the bold word as well.
– WAF
Jan 1 at 7:05
@WAF good thought — why didn't I think of that? If it's correct, I owe you.
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 7:34
Heh. It's all yours! Always happy to collaborate.
– WAF
Jan 2 at 6:12
add a comment |
Well; for a start:
The word "what" itself has four letters, the word "sometimes" has nine, the word "always" has six letters and the word "never" has five. So...
What has $4$ letters, sometimes $9$ letters, always $6$ letters and never $5$ letters. How? $3$ letters!
* worth noting that this was entirely @WAF in the comments.
You got the trick, but how?
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:54
Think literally
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:59
4
Maybe just apply the same rule to the bold word as well.
– WAF
Jan 1 at 7:05
@WAF good thought — why didn't I think of that? If it's correct, I owe you.
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 7:34
Heh. It's all yours! Always happy to collaborate.
– WAF
Jan 2 at 6:12
add a comment |
Well; for a start:
The word "what" itself has four letters, the word "sometimes" has nine, the word "always" has six letters and the word "never" has five. So...
What has $4$ letters, sometimes $9$ letters, always $6$ letters and never $5$ letters. How? $3$ letters!
* worth noting that this was entirely @WAF in the comments.
Well; for a start:
The word "what" itself has four letters, the word "sometimes" has nine, the word "always" has six letters and the word "never" has five. So...
What has $4$ letters, sometimes $9$ letters, always $6$ letters and never $5$ letters. How? $3$ letters!
* worth noting that this was entirely @WAF in the comments.
edited Jan 1 at 7:32
answered Jan 1 at 6:53


HughHugh
1,4781617
1,4781617
You got the trick, but how?
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:54
Think literally
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:59
4
Maybe just apply the same rule to the bold word as well.
– WAF
Jan 1 at 7:05
@WAF good thought — why didn't I think of that? If it's correct, I owe you.
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 7:34
Heh. It's all yours! Always happy to collaborate.
– WAF
Jan 2 at 6:12
add a comment |
You got the trick, but how?
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:54
Think literally
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:59
4
Maybe just apply the same rule to the bold word as well.
– WAF
Jan 1 at 7:05
@WAF good thought — why didn't I think of that? If it's correct, I owe you.
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 7:34
Heh. It's all yours! Always happy to collaborate.
– WAF
Jan 2 at 6:12
You got the trick, but how?
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:54
You got the trick, but how?
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:54
Think literally
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:59
Think literally
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 6:59
4
4
Maybe just apply the same rule to the bold word as well.
– WAF
Jan 1 at 7:05
Maybe just apply the same rule to the bold word as well.
– WAF
Jan 1 at 7:05
@WAF good thought — why didn't I think of that? If it's correct, I owe you.
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 7:34
@WAF good thought — why didn't I think of that? If it's correct, I owe you.
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 7:34
Heh. It's all yours! Always happy to collaborate.
– WAF
Jan 2 at 6:12
Heh. It's all yours! Always happy to collaborate.
– WAF
Jan 2 at 6:12
add a comment |
I kind of second Hugh's answer, but with a slight addition. What's in the question's body isn't really a question. It's a statement. What has 4 letters, sometimes 9 letters, always 6 letters and never 5 letters. It's just a count of the number of letters in each word succeeding the comma. This is like a guide/legend to answer the real question.
The real question
lies in the title ==> But, how is this possible?
The answer:
Taking the prototype in the statement given above... this has 4 letters. That is how THIS is possible. In other words... the answer to How is THIS possible?
1
Ha, lol. I should havs got that. Well done
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 15:21
1
Ummm... It was actually about "How"... A really good conclusion but the fact that the title wasn't allowing me less than 15 characters. I am sorry
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 16:23
1
"How?" is a question. it implies How about "how"?
– Ahmed Abdelhameed
Jan 2 at 7:37
I get it now @MohammadZuhairKhan. I took the title in the literal way.. good one though
– Rai
Jan 3 at 10:45
add a comment |
I kind of second Hugh's answer, but with a slight addition. What's in the question's body isn't really a question. It's a statement. What has 4 letters, sometimes 9 letters, always 6 letters and never 5 letters. It's just a count of the number of letters in each word succeeding the comma. This is like a guide/legend to answer the real question.
The real question
lies in the title ==> But, how is this possible?
The answer:
Taking the prototype in the statement given above... this has 4 letters. That is how THIS is possible. In other words... the answer to How is THIS possible?
1
Ha, lol. I should havs got that. Well done
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 15:21
1
Ummm... It was actually about "How"... A really good conclusion but the fact that the title wasn't allowing me less than 15 characters. I am sorry
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 16:23
1
"How?" is a question. it implies How about "how"?
– Ahmed Abdelhameed
Jan 2 at 7:37
I get it now @MohammadZuhairKhan. I took the title in the literal way.. good one though
– Rai
Jan 3 at 10:45
add a comment |
I kind of second Hugh's answer, but with a slight addition. What's in the question's body isn't really a question. It's a statement. What has 4 letters, sometimes 9 letters, always 6 letters and never 5 letters. It's just a count of the number of letters in each word succeeding the comma. This is like a guide/legend to answer the real question.
The real question
lies in the title ==> But, how is this possible?
The answer:
Taking the prototype in the statement given above... this has 4 letters. That is how THIS is possible. In other words... the answer to How is THIS possible?
I kind of second Hugh's answer, but with a slight addition. What's in the question's body isn't really a question. It's a statement. What has 4 letters, sometimes 9 letters, always 6 letters and never 5 letters. It's just a count of the number of letters in each word succeeding the comma. This is like a guide/legend to answer the real question.
The real question
lies in the title ==> But, how is this possible?
The answer:
Taking the prototype in the statement given above... this has 4 letters. That is how THIS is possible. In other words... the answer to How is THIS possible?
answered Jan 1 at 9:18


RaiRai
68119
68119
1
Ha, lol. I should havs got that. Well done
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 15:21
1
Ummm... It was actually about "How"... A really good conclusion but the fact that the title wasn't allowing me less than 15 characters. I am sorry
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 16:23
1
"How?" is a question. it implies How about "how"?
– Ahmed Abdelhameed
Jan 2 at 7:37
I get it now @MohammadZuhairKhan. I took the title in the literal way.. good one though
– Rai
Jan 3 at 10:45
add a comment |
1
Ha, lol. I should havs got that. Well done
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 15:21
1
Ummm... It was actually about "How"... A really good conclusion but the fact that the title wasn't allowing me less than 15 characters. I am sorry
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 16:23
1
"How?" is a question. it implies How about "how"?
– Ahmed Abdelhameed
Jan 2 at 7:37
I get it now @MohammadZuhairKhan. I took the title in the literal way.. good one though
– Rai
Jan 3 at 10:45
1
1
Ha, lol. I should havs got that. Well done
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 15:21
Ha, lol. I should havs got that. Well done
– Hugh
Jan 1 at 15:21
1
1
Ummm... It was actually about "How"... A really good conclusion but the fact that the title wasn't allowing me less than 15 characters. I am sorry
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 16:23
Ummm... It was actually about "How"... A really good conclusion but the fact that the title wasn't allowing me less than 15 characters. I am sorry
– Mohammad Zuhair Khan
Jan 1 at 16:23
1
1
"How?" is a question. it implies How about "how"?
– Ahmed Abdelhameed
Jan 2 at 7:37
"How?" is a question. it implies How about "how"?
– Ahmed Abdelhameed
Jan 2 at 7:37
I get it now @MohammadZuhairKhan. I took the title in the literal way.. good one though
– Rai
Jan 3 at 10:45
I get it now @MohammadZuhairKhan. I took the title in the literal way.. good one though
– Rai
Jan 3 at 10:45
add a comment |