Title text:
In 1899, people were walking around shouting ‘23’ at each other and laughing, and confused reporters were writing articles trying to figure out what it meant.
Transcript:
Transcript will show once it’s been added to explainxkcd.com
Source: https://xkcd.com/3184/
I feel like (6, 7) should definitely be a tuple
0118 999 881 999 119 725 3
I’ve had a bit of a tumble
I think it’s more of a 0118 999 88199 9119 725 3
Oh, that’s easy to remember!
Tree fiddy
For millennials, like me: 1337 means “LEET” which is short for “Elite”.
Sorry, what? I’m a millennial, this is common knowledge for anyone who played a videogame in the last quarter century.
I was reading Wikipedia about the origins of 23 and came across this neat tidbit:
On the RMS Titanic there was a watertight door on E Deck numbered 23 which was informally called the “skidoo door” according to the testimony of the Chief Baker Charles John Joughin.
Where’s 3.50?
Get outa here ya lock ness
It was about that time that I noticed that sweet little verilyfemme was a three story tall crustacean from the Mesozoic era!
Teens in different countries have different funny numbers too funny enough. There is a thing influencing multiple civilizations to do this.
31 is funny in Turkey.
twennyone
Missing “about three-fitty”
Tree fiddy
Dammit Loch Ness monster…
What about Schfifty-Five?
Three fiddy?
Tree-fiddy came so close to making the list I think but it feels right that it didn’t.
67 sneaking onto the ‘funny numbers’ list is hilarious—teens are basically a standards committee now.
Bot account? Comments seem like your average “short and humorous response” bot.
Definitely a bot, not sure what the point of them is on Lemmy.








