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  1. Dictionary
    riddle
    /ˈrɪdl/

    verb

    noun

    • 1. a large coarse sieve, especially one used for separating ashes from cinders or sand from gravel.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. a type of question that describes something in a difficult and confusing way and has a clever or funny answer, often asked as a game. [ C usually singular ] something that is confusing, or a problem that is difficult to solve: Scientists may have solved the riddle of Saturn's rings. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  3. The meaning of RIDDLE is a mystifying, misleading, or puzzling question posed as a problem to be solved or guessed : conundrum, enigma. How to use riddle in a sentence.

  4. a type of question that describes something in a difficult and confusing way and has a clever or funny answer, often asked as a game. [ C usually singular ] something that is confusing, or a problem that is difficult to solve: Scientists may have solved the riddle of Saturn's rings. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  5. Riddles are questions or statements that offer a puzzle to be solved. They often involve critical thinking on the reader’s part in order to figure out the answer, and this offers challenging entertainment.

  6. A riddle is a puzzle or joke in which you ask a question that seems to be nonsense but which has a clever or amusing answer.

  7. What's a question or problem that requires a bit of thought before you answer? It's a riddle, of course. The verb riddle can mean to speak in a puzzling fashion, though that use is not very common.

  8. 1. a question, puzzle, or verse so phrased that ingenuity is required for elucidation of the answer or meaning; conundrum. 2. a person or thing that puzzles, perplexes, or confuses; enigma. vb. 3. to solve, explain, or interpret (a riddle or riddles) 4. ( intr) to speak in riddles.

  9. Feb 12, 2020 · A riddle (pronounced RI-del )is a type of verbal play, a question or observation deliberately worded in a puzzling manner and presented as a problem to be solved. Also Known As: enigma, adianoeta. Etymology: From the Old English, "opinion, interpretation, riddle" Examples and Observations. "Young children love riddles. So do non-literate peoples.

  10. A riddle is a question, a puzzle, a phrase, or a statement devised to get unexpected or clever answers. It is a folklore genre as well as rhetorical device, often having veiled or double meanings.

  11. Synonyms for RIDDLE: mystery, puzzle, enigma, conundrum, why, secret, problem, mystification; Antonyms of RIDDLE: fill, patch, seal, plug.