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Dilbert cartoon first published on Wednesday 5th July 1989

Dilbert//81, first published 37 years ago on Wednesday 5th July 1989


Tags

cross word challenge


Official transcript

Dilbert and Dogbert sit at a table playing Scrabble. As Dogbert arranges his letters on the game board, Dilbert asks, "What the heck is 'jequirity?'"

Dogbert replies, "You know - the poisonous, red and black seed of the Indian Licorice plant. Want to challenge?"

Dilbert replies, "No. At least this one has vowels."

Dogbert says, "That's 704 for me."

originally published on dilbert.com


Open source transcript

WHAT THE HECK IS "JEQUIRITY"?

77 pradi YOU KNOW - THE POISONOUS, RED AND BLACK SEED OF THE INDIAN LICORICE PLANT.

WANT TO CHALLENGE?

NO. AT LEAST THIS ONE HAS VOWELS.

THAT'S 704 FOR ME.

collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive


AI Analysis

Comic Strip Title: "Vowels"

Summary:

The comic strip, originally published in 1989, features a conversation between a dog and a man at a desk. The dog asks the man what "jequirity" is, and the man responds that it refers to the poisonous, red, and black seeds of the Indian Licorice Plant.

The dog then asks if it wants to challenge the man to a game, and the man agrees. The dog wins the game, but instead of celebrating, it simply says "no. at least this one has vowels." The man is confused by the dog's statement, and the comic ends with the dog walking away, leaving the man puzzled.

Key Points:

  • The comic strip features a humorous conversation between a dog and a man.
  • The dog asks about the meaning of "jequirity" and the man provides an answer.
  • The dog wins a game against the man, but its response is cryptic and confusing.
  • The comic strip ends with the dog walking away, leaving the man puzzled.

generated by llama-3.2-11b-vision-instruct


Accompanying textual content, such as title, tags and transcripts, is shown here if we have it. Not every comic has all of these, and they seem to be a bit hit and miss even on the official website.

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