A Difficult Job












23














My plumber gave me a perilous job--his figurines had been stolen (3). I had to endure Ian's sobbing before he would tell me the problem under his feet (2). It turns out the girl he dated had taken his possessions, leaving only cheese in the fridge (2).



After my day's investigations, some ice-cream felt sublime (1). No barriers remained, and my main goal had been met (2). When Ian asked how things were going, I told him the day had been ________.



note: The numbers do not refer to the length of a word.










share|improve this question





























    23














    My plumber gave me a perilous job--his figurines had been stolen (3). I had to endure Ian's sobbing before he would tell me the problem under his feet (2). It turns out the girl he dated had taken his possessions, leaving only cheese in the fridge (2).



    After my day's investigations, some ice-cream felt sublime (1). No barriers remained, and my main goal had been met (2). When Ian asked how things were going, I told him the day had been ________.



    note: The numbers do not refer to the length of a word.










    share|improve this question



























      23












      23








      23


      1





      My plumber gave me a perilous job--his figurines had been stolen (3). I had to endure Ian's sobbing before he would tell me the problem under his feet (2). It turns out the girl he dated had taken his possessions, leaving only cheese in the fridge (2).



      After my day's investigations, some ice-cream felt sublime (1). No barriers remained, and my main goal had been met (2). When Ian asked how things were going, I told him the day had been ________.



      note: The numbers do not refer to the length of a word.










      share|improve this question















      My plumber gave me a perilous job--his figurines had been stolen (3). I had to endure Ian's sobbing before he would tell me the problem under his feet (2). It turns out the girl he dated had taken his possessions, leaving only cheese in the fridge (2).



      After my day's investigations, some ice-cream felt sublime (1). No barriers remained, and my main goal had been met (2). When Ian asked how things were going, I told him the day had been ________.



      note: The numbers do not refer to the length of a word.







      enigmatic-puzzle lateral-thinking story






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 22 hours ago







      1848

















      asked 23 hours ago









      18481848

      2,120122




      2,120122






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          26














          The day had been ...




          ... fruitful.




          Why?




          Each sentence contains as many names of fruit as indicated by the number in parentheses. The fruit are included phonetically, so the spelling in the sentence may differ:


          My plumber gave me a perilous job – his figurines had been stolen.
          I had to endure Ian's sobbing before he would tell me the problem under his feet.
          It turns out the girl he dated had taken his possessions, leaving only cheese in the fridge.


          After my day's investigations, some ice-cream felt sublime.
          No barriers remained, and my main goal had been met.







          share|improve this answer





















          • Oh 🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌! – Elephant Child's brothers
            – hat
            17 hours ago










          • I can't work out how the fourth item or the next to last item satisfy the explanation.
            – phoog
            9 hours ago










          • @phoog: It's "endure Ian's" and "barriers". (That last one may be a stretch, because the final "r" seems to be in the way.)
            – M Oehm
            9 hours ago












          • Oh I see. I'd never heard of the former. For the latter, not only the final R is a problem, but the vowel in the first syllable (in my experience, many non-native speakers from Europe think that these are the same vowel, but my not recognizing the connection here is a good example of how they are not).
            – phoog
            9 hours ago












          • I was going for the first two syllables of "barrier" only. That seemed close enough, so I added the word.
            – 1848
            1 hour ago













          Your Answer





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          1 Answer
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          active

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          26














          The day had been ...




          ... fruitful.




          Why?




          Each sentence contains as many names of fruit as indicated by the number in parentheses. The fruit are included phonetically, so the spelling in the sentence may differ:


          My plumber gave me a perilous job – his figurines had been stolen.
          I had to endure Ian's sobbing before he would tell me the problem under his feet.
          It turns out the girl he dated had taken his possessions, leaving only cheese in the fridge.


          After my day's investigations, some ice-cream felt sublime.
          No barriers remained, and my main goal had been met.







          share|improve this answer





















          • Oh 🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌! – Elephant Child's brothers
            – hat
            17 hours ago










          • I can't work out how the fourth item or the next to last item satisfy the explanation.
            – phoog
            9 hours ago










          • @phoog: It's "endure Ian's" and "barriers". (That last one may be a stretch, because the final "r" seems to be in the way.)
            – M Oehm
            9 hours ago












          • Oh I see. I'd never heard of the former. For the latter, not only the final R is a problem, but the vowel in the first syllable (in my experience, many non-native speakers from Europe think that these are the same vowel, but my not recognizing the connection here is a good example of how they are not).
            – phoog
            9 hours ago












          • I was going for the first two syllables of "barrier" only. That seemed close enough, so I added the word.
            – 1848
            1 hour ago


















          26














          The day had been ...




          ... fruitful.




          Why?




          Each sentence contains as many names of fruit as indicated by the number in parentheses. The fruit are included phonetically, so the spelling in the sentence may differ:


          My plumber gave me a perilous job – his figurines had been stolen.
          I had to endure Ian's sobbing before he would tell me the problem under his feet.
          It turns out the girl he dated had taken his possessions, leaving only cheese in the fridge.


          After my day's investigations, some ice-cream felt sublime.
          No barriers remained, and my main goal had been met.







          share|improve this answer





















          • Oh 🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌! – Elephant Child's brothers
            – hat
            17 hours ago










          • I can't work out how the fourth item or the next to last item satisfy the explanation.
            – phoog
            9 hours ago










          • @phoog: It's "endure Ian's" and "barriers". (That last one may be a stretch, because the final "r" seems to be in the way.)
            – M Oehm
            9 hours ago












          • Oh I see. I'd never heard of the former. For the latter, not only the final R is a problem, but the vowel in the first syllable (in my experience, many non-native speakers from Europe think that these are the same vowel, but my not recognizing the connection here is a good example of how they are not).
            – phoog
            9 hours ago












          • I was going for the first two syllables of "barrier" only. That seemed close enough, so I added the word.
            – 1848
            1 hour ago
















          26












          26








          26






          The day had been ...




          ... fruitful.




          Why?




          Each sentence contains as many names of fruit as indicated by the number in parentheses. The fruit are included phonetically, so the spelling in the sentence may differ:


          My plumber gave me a perilous job – his figurines had been stolen.
          I had to endure Ian's sobbing before he would tell me the problem under his feet.
          It turns out the girl he dated had taken his possessions, leaving only cheese in the fridge.


          After my day's investigations, some ice-cream felt sublime.
          No barriers remained, and my main goal had been met.







          share|improve this answer












          The day had been ...




          ... fruitful.




          Why?




          Each sentence contains as many names of fruit as indicated by the number in parentheses. The fruit are included phonetically, so the spelling in the sentence may differ:


          My plumber gave me a perilous job – his figurines had been stolen.
          I had to endure Ian's sobbing before he would tell me the problem under his feet.
          It turns out the girl he dated had taken his possessions, leaving only cheese in the fridge.


          After my day's investigations, some ice-cream felt sublime.
          No barriers remained, and my main goal had been met.








          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 18 hours ago









          M OehmM Oehm

          35.6k1109166




          35.6k1109166












          • Oh 🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌! – Elephant Child's brothers
            – hat
            17 hours ago










          • I can't work out how the fourth item or the next to last item satisfy the explanation.
            – phoog
            9 hours ago










          • @phoog: It's "endure Ian's" and "barriers". (That last one may be a stretch, because the final "r" seems to be in the way.)
            – M Oehm
            9 hours ago












          • Oh I see. I'd never heard of the former. For the latter, not only the final R is a problem, but the vowel in the first syllable (in my experience, many non-native speakers from Europe think that these are the same vowel, but my not recognizing the connection here is a good example of how they are not).
            – phoog
            9 hours ago












          • I was going for the first two syllables of "barrier" only. That seemed close enough, so I added the word.
            – 1848
            1 hour ago




















          • Oh 🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌! – Elephant Child's brothers
            – hat
            17 hours ago










          • I can't work out how the fourth item or the next to last item satisfy the explanation.
            – phoog
            9 hours ago










          • @phoog: It's "endure Ian's" and "barriers". (That last one may be a stretch, because the final "r" seems to be in the way.)
            – M Oehm
            9 hours ago












          • Oh I see. I'd never heard of the former. For the latter, not only the final R is a problem, but the vowel in the first syllable (in my experience, many non-native speakers from Europe think that these are the same vowel, but my not recognizing the connection here is a good example of how they are not).
            – phoog
            9 hours ago












          • I was going for the first two syllables of "barrier" only. That seemed close enough, so I added the word.
            – 1848
            1 hour ago


















          Oh 🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌! – Elephant Child's brothers
          – hat
          17 hours ago




          Oh 🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌! – Elephant Child's brothers
          – hat
          17 hours ago












          I can't work out how the fourth item or the next to last item satisfy the explanation.
          – phoog
          9 hours ago




          I can't work out how the fourth item or the next to last item satisfy the explanation.
          – phoog
          9 hours ago












          @phoog: It's "endure Ian's" and "barriers". (That last one may be a stretch, because the final "r" seems to be in the way.)
          – M Oehm
          9 hours ago






          @phoog: It's "endure Ian's" and "barriers". (That last one may be a stretch, because the final "r" seems to be in the way.)
          – M Oehm
          9 hours ago














          Oh I see. I'd never heard of the former. For the latter, not only the final R is a problem, but the vowel in the first syllable (in my experience, many non-native speakers from Europe think that these are the same vowel, but my not recognizing the connection here is a good example of how they are not).
          – phoog
          9 hours ago






          Oh I see. I'd never heard of the former. For the latter, not only the final R is a problem, but the vowel in the first syllable (in my experience, many non-native speakers from Europe think that these are the same vowel, but my not recognizing the connection here is a good example of how they are not).
          – phoog
          9 hours ago














          I was going for the first two syllables of "barrier" only. That seemed close enough, so I added the word.
          – 1848
          1 hour ago






          I was going for the first two syllables of "barrier" only. That seemed close enough, so I added the word.
          – 1848
          1 hour ago




















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