There's a woman in a boat on a lake.
There’s a woman in a boat, on a lake, wearing a coat. If you want to know her name, it’s in the riddle I just wrote.
What’s the woman’s name?
“Theresa” is the woman’s name. (There’s a = Theresa)
An alternative answer is “There”.
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24 Comments on "A Woman in a Boat"
That is just stupid!
A better answer is Nina, because it can be found in “womaN IN A boat”
funny really funny.
Ona Lake makes more sense (on a lake)
The reason “there” works a little better is because you can replace it with a woman’s name and it still makes sense. “Hilda is a woman on a boat”. You can’t do that with nina or ona lake.
“Theresa” ‘There is a’
It should be Anna Lake as in there was a woman on a boat “Anna Lake”
It’s Theresa – There’s a.
My answer was Theresa….There-is-a. I guess I was close! LoL 😀
The woman’s name is ‘Theresa’
Additional answer is that her name is “in the riddle I just wrote”. If you can use something stupid like “there” you can use this too.
there is also eve if said aloud ..IF..can be said as eve but terrible riddle blain the train would have crashed the gunslinger for sure.
Theresa is her name.
Thanks for the comments. Theresa is much better than there. I’ve updated the riddle!
This is beyond dumb. I get that in terms of spelling theresa works but phonetically it fails. Very poor riddle. If you tell someone a riddle they should be able to work it out with either knowing the object (the candle riddle for example) or they have to get the phonetics for hidden word riddles.
Anna Lake is far better than Theresa. Let’s vary things slightly to clarify my point.
1. There is a woman on a boat, Anna BLake wearing a coat.
2. There is a woman on a boat, Betty Boop wearing a coat.
Just the way I see hear it of course.
That answer is wrong as the riddle was incorrectly written – The correct way that this is to be written out is There Is a woman in a boat, on a lake, wearing a coat. If you want to know her name, it’s in the riddle I just wrote.
What’s the woman’s name?
NOT THERE”S, that is why the answer is not making any sense.
The answer to the riddle is NOT TERESA.
It is THERE the woman’s name is There.
How about What…is her name.
Miss use of comma’s and appostrophe. Should be There, is a woman … I realize that ruins the humor, but who cares?
What is the Real answer is it Onna.
Until the riddle is asked the right way, there is bound to be some varying responses.
From most popular searches, It is supposed to be: There is a woman in a boat, on a lake, wearing a coat.
Knowing her name according to the riddle is in reference to the riddle itself.
In answering, go straight to the noun or subject position of the statement, ask yourself this question: Who is a woman in a boat, on a lake, wearing a coat? You’ll see an answer…it doesn’t really matter if the answer isn’t your regular name type or suggestion.
You can decide to keep that first word of the riddle unknown or as “dash-meaning empty” then you read the preceding words after which you come back to fill the blank space with a word IN the riddle that pops up in your mind as most suitable for an answer, here you’ll discover its the same word “THERE”
Strongly, I believe it is a matter or the part of speech and necessarily not stereotypes of names. A lot people are saying THERESA because it’s known as a name, and we disagree to “THERE” as a possible answer forgetting that the answer is to be found in the riddle itself. Tell me please, Is there any such word as THERESA in the riddle? Do you now have an answer? Love y’all.
Ona Ina Theresa.
It is Theresa ” on a” does not = Anna. Ona and Ina are not names and it is said the answer is in the riddle they just wrote so you cant use the sounds you need to use the written letters to find a name. I could possibly be Nina because that can also be found in the written letters.
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