Boise Ed recommends Doc Rat, and this Oy from the October 1 front page at Docrat.com.au was more available than others.



And indeed Brevity is generally going to yield up some species of OY, as here:





Boise Ed recommends Doc Rat, and this Oy from the October 1 front page at Docrat.com.au was more available than others.



And indeed Brevity is generally going to yield up some species of OY, as here:







Sent in by Barbara – thanks!










Seems like Brevity tries out a pun every single day. Sometimes they may hit all right.


Ah well, this may raise the perpetual question, Can an auditory pun survive being put into writing when that breaks up a double meaning?






From Andréa, as a kind of Arlo-OY:


Also Andréa:


This is not a full-fledged Sunday comic, but the intro and the two “throwaway” panels. Yet here is where the funny bit was!


From Mark Jackson:



Of course people have always thought “Ira Roth” could be someone’s name.


Oh wait! Just noticed that Arnold Zwicky’s blog goes into linguistic and referential detail about this one.

Sent in by Andréa, BillR, and Dan Sachs; this is somewhat of a CIDU-OY. You may need to brush up on your triggernometry!











Brevity is one of those strips that seems to try a pun every time. But if we get too used to it, we may not notice when a pretty good one slips by.



We were about to cavil that the “k” was the same thing in both cases … but it really isn’t.

Therapeutic notes from Andréa!






Sent by Boise Ed.
The comic’s creator on his website can’t stop punning apparently, and gives the post containing this a title of “O temp, O remoras“.

And what did he think it said?
BTW, we always have plenty of LOLs and Oys, but are running low on genuine CIDUs. I guess everyone understands all their comics? If you get any CIDUs, please send them in.








And after the argument, she drove off in a Huff.
(If you are on a phone, you may not be able to see the Huff.)

Funnier than it deserves to be!



From Andréa and more.

From Andréa.

