Just for Fun

We know that money can be names differently for the purpose it is used for. Some of the examples of money given at following places or for following activities:

In temple = Daan
In school = Fees
During marriage = Dowry
For divorce = Alimony
Paying government = Tax
In court = Fine
Employer to employee = Salary
To kidnappers = Ransom
For illegal reason = Bribe
To civil servant retirees = Pension

Do you know what do we call the money a husband gives to his wife?




Similar Riddles

10+10 and 11+11 can give you the same answer.

Explain how?

Asked by Neha on 07 Aug 2021


Can you count the number of lines in the below picture?

Count The Number Of Lines

Asked by Neha on 27 Dec 2023

In this image, you can see three almost identical Doraemon images. Can you spot the odd one out from them?

Odd one out Doraemon picture riddle

Asked by Neha on 19 Apr 2021


Spot 5 differences in two Christmas tree below:

Christmas Tree

Asked by Neha on 06 Jul 2021

There is a square of a particular number which when doubled, becomes 7 more than its quarter.

Can you find the number?

Asked by Neha on 17 Jul 2023

While sitting in the Car, John suddenly finds that one of the wheels was missing. John noticed that a killer is approaching towards him. John cannot get out of the car.

How will John escape?

Asked by Neha on 14 Jan 2021


Manish and Manoj play 5 games of chess.
Both Manish and Manoj win the exact same number of games. There is no tie at all.

How?

Asked by Neha on 11 Feb 2024

Give it food and it will live; give it water and it will die.

Asked by Neha on 17 Dec 2023

Below the four parts have been reorganised. The four partitions are exactly the same in both arrangements. Why is there a hole?

Missing Piece Riddle

Asked by Neha on 03 Apr 2021


In a rainy season, one day 3 huge ladies walked under a normal-sized umbrella.
The umbrella is not huge enough to accommodate all 3 ladies yet not a single lady got wet. Why?

Asked by Neha on 19 May 2024

Hot Articles

Amazing Facts

Out of the Box

The phrase “thinking outside the box” was popularised from the solution to a topographical puzzle involving 9 dots in a box shape.