jokes bad or otherwise.

The youngest son asked his mother how old she was.

She answered, "39 and holding."

He thought for a moment and then asked, "And how old would you be if you let go?"
 
An anagram, as we all know, is a word or phrase made by transposing or rearranging the letters of another word or phrase. The following examples are possibly quite fun:

Dormitory = Dirty Room
Desperation = A Rope Ends It
The Morse Code = Here Come Dots
Slot Machines = Cash Lost in 'em
Animosity = Is No Amity
 
Yet more astounding anagrams

The Public Art Galleries = Large Picture Halls,
I Bet A Decimal Point = I'm a Dot in Place
The Earthquakes = That Queer Shake
Eleven plus two = Twelve plus one
Contradiction = Accord not in it
 
A penultimate anagram, for now (from Billy Wagglelance)

"To be or not to be: that is the question, whether tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune."

Becomes:

"In one of the Bard's best-thought-of tragedies, our insistent hero, Hamlet, queries on two fronts about how life turns rotten."
 
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