
The benefits of telling riddles to children far exceed entertainment. Research shows that incorporating riddles into children’s learning experiences may have a profound impact on their cognitive development. One study shows that introducing riddles in second-grade classrooms laid the foundation for later development of logical mathematical thinking.
Kids’ tricky riddles
Riddle 1: Racing puzzle
- question: You are playing and you pass the person as second place before the finish line. Where did you finish the competition?
- answer: Second place.
- explain: This riddle requires some horizontal thinking. When you surpass that person as second place, you take their place, but you don’t surpass that person in the first place. So you end the game with second place.
Riddle 2: The mysterious coffin
- question: Makes me unable to use my people. People who buy me will always buy me for others. People who use me don’t know. What am I?
- answer:coffin.
- explain: This riddle is a classic example of a lateral thinking puzzle. The answer is the coffin, because:
- It cannot be used by people who make coffins (coffin manufacturers).
- The person who buys the coffin usually does this for others (the deceased).
- The person who “used” the coffin (deceased) did not realize it.
Riddle 3: Card Deck
- question: What are 13 hearts but no lungs, feet or abdomen?
- answer: A card.
- explain: This riddle is a verbal smart drama. Standard cards have 13 hearts (suits), but no lungs, feet or abdomen.
Riddle 4: Grandpa’s Walk
- question: Grandpa went for a walk and it started to rain. He forgot to bring an umbrella and had no hat. When he got home, his clothes were wet, but his hair was not wet. How is that possible?
- answer: Grandpa is bald.
- explain: This riddle is a great example of a clever twist. The answer is that grandpa is bald, so he has no hair to get wet.
Riddle 5: Short words
- question:When you add two letters, which five letter word becomes shorter?
- answer: Short.
- explain: This riddle is a verbal smart drama. When you add the letter “er” to the end of the word “jan”, it becomes shorter. This riddle highlights the importance of word games and clever language in solving puzzles.
Riddle 6: Echo
- question: I have no mouth to speak, no ears to hear. I have no one, but I come with the wind. What am I?
- answer:echo.
- explain: This riddle is a classic example of a lateral thinking puzzle. echo:
- There is no mouth to speak because it is a repetitive sound.
- There is no ear sound heard because it responds to the original sound.
- No one, because this is an inanimate phenomenon.
- As the wind changes, it affects the way the echo sounds, and comes with the style of the wind.
Riddle 7: The Future
- question: There is always something in front of you, but you can never see it?
- answer:future.
- explain: This riddle is a thought-provoking exploration of time and perception. future:
- Always in front of us, because it has not yet arrived.
- It can never be seen, because it has not happened yet, so it is unknown.
Riddle 8: Sponge
- question: What is a hole filled but still contains water?
- answer:sponge.
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- explain: This riddle is a clever drama in the characteristics of the sponge. sponge:
- There are holes everywhere because it has many pores and cavity.
- It can still absorb water because it can absorb and retain liquid.
Riddle 9: Cold
- question:What can you catch but can’t throw it?
- answer:cold.
- explain: This riddle is a clever drama of the multiple meanings of the word “capture”. you can:
- Cold, such as contract or infection.
- Don’t catch a cold, because it is not a physical object that can be abandoned.
Riddle 10: River
- question: What can you run, but never walk, have a mouth, but never talk, have a head, but never cry, have a bed but never sleep?
- answer: A river.
- explain: This riddle is a clever drama on the word, using metaphors to describe a river:
- A river can “run” or flow, but cannot walk.
- The “mouth” of a river is in a place where it encounters the sea or other body of water, but cannot speak.
- A river has a “head” or source, but cannot cry or cry.
- A river has a “bed” or passage, but cannot fall asleep.
Riddle 11: A one-story house
- question: In the first floor house at the corner of the road, the bedroom is yellow, the kitchen is orange, the living room is red, the garage is blue, the entrance hall is green, and the living room is purple. What color is the staircase?
- answer: No color, because there are no stairs – This is a one-story house.
- explain: This riddle is a clever example of a lateral thinking puzzle. The answer is not a color, but the realization that a house on one floor has no stairs.
Riddle 12: Needle
- question:What is an eye but not visible?
- answer:Needle.
- explain: This riddle is a clever drama in the word, using the metaphor of “eye” to describe the needle: the needle has “eye” or “hole”, but cannot be seen.
Riddle 13: Silence
- question: Once you say its name, what breaks?
- answer:silence.
- explain: This riddle is a clever example of a lateral thinking puzzle. The answer is silence because: when you say the word “silence”, you break the silence.
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