#1
The beginning of eternity.
The end of time and space.
The beginning of every end,
and the end of every place.
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#1
The beginning of eternity.
The end of time and space.
The beginning of every end,
and the end of every place.
#2
I am the black child of a white father;
A wingless bird, flying even to the clouds of heaven.
I give birth to tears of mourning in pupils that meet me,
and at once on my birth I am dissolved into air.
As for the other one im thinking............ Tricky.
Only thing i can think of is Fire/Smoke, but i dont get the first line if thats true.
Your too good Eejit
Correct on both riddles
#1 the letter "E"
#2 smoke
1st one was Obvious...well to me.
2nd one was hard as even with getting it i dont get the first line.
#3
Often we are covered with wisdom and wit,
and oft with a cloth where the dinner guests sit;
In beauty around you and over your head,
we are countless, though numbered when bound to be read.
Leaves??
Again, 3 of the 4 fit it, just not the 2nd one.
Oh hang on, i get it now!
Leaves is right again.
That did it I shall find a stumper.
Bloody geniuses
#4
Eight and five, last name and given,
We are one six six six even;
The first in cow, the last in oxen
Three in damsel, three in vixen.
Roman Numerals.
you google whore
I got the answer on google myself
I am so stupid sometimes
Its too obvious. The riddle was all number related. I found no adjoining way the numbers could be related in English or a Language, and then i saw all the "X"'s. X makes the spot!
I am related to what famous poet?
Hint: gitche gumme's fictional character
I dont know who they are or what u mean.
Famous Poet - Random Guess - Robert Burns
That's OK Eejit
I am sure NDN will know or some one else
Good try
Kinda helps if i know who or what your talking about with your hint:)
Im claiming no responsibility for not knowing that!
I will wager that NDN knows the answer
I tried googling that ringo, cant find it, and i thought it was gumee? So Google says about MN anyway
Famous american writer?
Hemmingway?
No wrong
you are wrong
There are 13 pennies on the desk. They are all in one group, 5 of them being heads and 8 being tales. You have to split them into 2 groups with the same amount of heads in both groups (you can flip the coins). The trick is, you have to do it in the dark, not knowing which coins are which.
This might take a while
Touch. Feel the indentations. I could do that
That doesn't count
There is a mathmatical answer
The first answer is Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
I am related to him and the fictional character was Hiawatha.
The answer to the coin riddle is
Take 5 pennies from the group of 13, and flip all of them.
If I grabbed all 5 heads, then they become tails, and the groups are even at 0apiece. If I grabbed 5 tails, then they all become heads, and they are all even at 5 heads apiece. This as also true for any combination of heads and tails...
Riddles suck. But I'm not good at those so maybe that's why I think they suck. lol.