Sometimes the whole/hole homophone pair is exploited in spoken (not written) riddles. They might be saying, "take away the hole."
Another possibility is "infinity" whereby an infinite number of objects can be removed from an infinite set to leave behind a still-infinite set. This would be a dodgy stretch of meaning for "whole."
Whole- - - - (take away the some) wholesome whole THE ANSWER IS IN THE RIDDLE FOR CRYING OUT LOUD :'( :D your welcome!
Consider the whole number 1 and let's say we divide it by 0.1 What is meant by the above statement is how many 0.1 are there in 1 That is (1)/(0.1) and can be written as (1)/(1/10) and asks how many 1/10th are there in 1. We see 1 is a whole number divided by a fraction which will always yield a larger quotient than the original number.
3.07 is 0.93 away from 4, but it's only 0.07 away from 3.So the nearest whole number is 3.
steal
The two whole numbers on either side of 57.3 are 57 and 58. The first of these is 57.3 - 57 = 0.3 away while the second is 58 - 57.3 = 0.7 away. So cleary the first, 57 is the nearest whole number.
Money is what people need but gives away. This is a riddle.
Whole- - - - (take away the some) wholesome whole THE ANSWER IS IN THE RIDDLE FOR CRYING OUT LOUD :'( :D your welcome!
when the toy runs away
when i strirred the soup aguido ran away
The riddle, "I give you a group of three. One is sitting down, and will never get up. The second eats s much as is given to him, yet is always hungry. The third goes away and never returns." The answer is stove or oven for the first, second is fire, and third is smoke.
Old riddle. "Take away the S"
put the pudding on the floor
Basically, no matter how advanced our civilization/species gets, there will always be a need for honor, integrity, courage, loyalty, and duty. Character counts for a lot
No, girls do not always get away with stuff.
flee-flea
Whole some. You take away the whole and there are still SOME left over
hiccup