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Revision as of 01:26, 16 October 2001


Hints for non-USians please... I assume the punchline must be some famous (in the US only) quote about baseball?


At the risk of being a bore here . . . when referring to baseball "it was the bottom of the ninth, the score was tied and the bases were loaded" means:

  • The game had reach the last inning (the equivalent of the fourth innings of a cricket test match, or, as a looser analogy, injury time in the second half of a football match)
  • Both teams were on the same score (ie 0-0, 1-1 or some other similar score)
  • Trying to describe "the bases are loaded" is impossible without giving a basic rundown of the game itself, but put simply it's a position from which one team is in a good position to score one or more, and is thus a tense period in the game.


I should point out that the manuscript for orchestral music is also called a score, and in US English "loaded" is a synonym for inebriated (drunk).


So the punchline of the joke is that the conductor's statement seemingly about the bass players also makes perfect sense as a comment about baseball.


Sorry to bore everyone to tears explaining this, but somebody did ask.


Some people don't find puns funny. Even after you explained how the words are used in the pun, some may simply respond "Why is playing with words considered funny?"