From brain-teasers to silly puns, these are sure to keep you guessing
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Brainteasers and riddles are a great way for kids to practice their problem-solving skills. Even better, riddles are seriously fun! From super-easy questions to tough head-scratchers , we’ve put together a list of the best riddles for kids, along with the answers—and explanations just in case you need a little extra help.
4 Great Riddles for Kids
- If you don’t keep me, I’ll break. What am I? A promise
- What gets wet as it dries? A towel
- What kind of dog has no tail? A hot dog
- What has one eye but can’t see? A needle
Steps
Section 1 of 9:
Easy Riddles
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Warm up with these simple riddles. Whether you want to ease into tougher riddles or you’re looking for riddles for little ones, these easy riddles are a great way to get started. We’ve included a mix of questions like puns and brainteasers—how many can you answer?
- Question:
How many months have 28 days? [1]
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- Answer: All of them—every month has at least 28 days.
- Question:
What’s something you can catch but not throw? [2]
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- Answer: A cold
- Question:
I go up and down but never move. What am I?
- Answer: A staircase
- Question:
I live in the sky but fall to the ground. I’m cold and white and make no sound. What am I?
- Answer: Snow
- Question:
What is full of holes but can still hold water?
- Answer: A sponge
- Question:
What kind of dog has no tail?
- Answer: A hot dog
- Question:
I have hands and a face but I can’t clap or smile. What am I?
- Answer: A clock
- Explanation: The hands on clocks point to the time, and the face is the front of the clock with the numbers.
- Question:
It belongs to you, but other people use it more. What is it? [3]
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- Answer: Your name
- Explanation: Even though your name belongs to you, other people use it more when they refer to you.
- Question:
Jamal’s mother has three children: Snap, Crackle, and… ? [4]
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- Answer: Jamal
- Explanation: If Jamal’s mother only has 3 children, one of them has to be Jamal.
- Question:
I have a head and a tail but no body. What am I? [5]
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- Answer: A coin
- Explanation: The two sides of a coin are called the head and the tail.
- Question:
If you don’t keep me, I’ll break. What am I?
- Answer: A promise
- Explanation: If you don’t keep a promise, it’s called a broken promise.
- Question:
What are the two things you can never have for breakfast?
- Answer: Lunch and dinner
- Explanation: You can eat any food you want for breakfast, but if it’s breakfast, it can’t be lunch or dinner.
- Question:
What gets wet as it dries?
- Answer: A towel
- Explanation: A towel gets wet when you use it to dry off
- Question:
What can travel around the world but never leaves the corner?
- Answer: A postage stamp
- Explanation: Postage stamps are attached to the corner of an envelope—and when they’re mailed, they can go all over the world.
- Question:
How many months have 28 days? [1]
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Section 2 of 9:
What Has…
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These riddles all start with “What has…” Looking for riddles that follow a classic format? This section is for you. These fun riddles are perfect when you want to level up the trivia.
- Question:
What has a ring but no finger? [6]
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- Answer: A telephone
- Question:
What has a bark but no bite?
- Answer: A tree
- Explanation: The rough surface on a tree is called the bark, but trees don’t bite.
- Question:
What has wheels and flies but is not an airplane?
- Answer: A garbage truck
- Explanation: Garbage trucks frequently attract flies.
- Question:
What has ears but cannot hear?
- Answer: A cornfield
- Explanation: Corn grows in ears—but cornfields can’t hear anything.
- Question:
What has legs but doesn’t walk? [7]
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- Answer: A table
- Explanation: The parts that hold up a table are called the legs.
- Question:
What has 13 hearts but no other organs? [8]
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- Answer: A deck of cards
- Explanation: The four suits in a card deck are hearts, diamonds, clubs, and spades. Each suit has 13 cards.
- Question:
What has keys but can’t open locks?
- Answer: A piano
- Explanation: The part of a piano that you press is called the keys.
- Question:
What has a mouth but can’t speak?
- Answer: River
- Explanation: The point where a river joins another body of water is called the mouth.
- Question:
What has one eye but can’t see? [9]
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- Answer: A needle
- Explanation: The opening at the top of a needle is called an eye
- Question:
What has a ring but no finger? [6]
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Section 3 of 9:
Vocabulary
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Test your knowledge with these vocab-themed riddles. These questions if you’re looking for fun extra-credit questions for a classroom quiz or you just want to test your vocabulary. These questions all deal with spelling and vocabulary—can you guess them all?
- Question:
What’s the only word in the dictionary that’s spelled wrong? [10]
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- Answer: Wrong
- Explanation: No other word in the dictionary is spelled W-R-O-N-G
- Question:
Which word becomes shorter when you add two letters to it?
- Answer: The word short
- Explanation: Adding the letters “-er” to the word “short” makes it “shorter.”
- Question:
It’s the only place in the world where today comes before yesterday. Where is it?
- Answer: A dictionary
- Explanation: Dictionaries are organized in alphabetical order, so the word “today” comes before the word “yesterday.”
- Question:
A railroad crossing without any cars. Can you spell that without any R’s? [11]
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- Answer: T-H-A-T
- Explanation: This one makes you think you’re supposed to spell “railroad crossing without any cars” without using the letter R, but really you’re supposed to spell “that.”
- Question:
What starts with T, ends with T, and has T inside?
- Answer: A teapot
- Explanation: A teapot starts and ends with the letter T and is used to hold tea.
- Question:
What question can never be answered “yes”? [12]
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- Answer: “Are you asleep?”
- Explanation: If you’re sleeping, you can’t say yes, and if you’re awake, the answer is no.
- Question:
I’m the beginning of everything, eternity, and the end, and the end of time of space. What am I?
- Answer: The letter E
- Question:
I’m in seconds, minutes, seasons, and centuries, but not in days or years. What am I?
- Answer: The letter N
- Question:
How many letters are in the alphabet?
- Answer: 11
- Explanation: There are only 11 letters in the phrase “the alphabet.”
- Question:
What word begins and ends with E but only has one letter?
- Answer: An envelope
- Explanation: The word “envelope” starts and ends with the letter E, and envelopes are used to hold letters.
- Question:
What starts with “P,” ends with “E,” and has thousands of letters?
- Answer: Post office
- Question:
What appears once in a minute, twice in a moment, but never in a thousand years?
- Answer: The letter M
- Question:
What’s the only word in the dictionary that’s spelled wrong? [10]
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Section 4 of 9:
Science
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Put your STEM skills to the test with these riddles. Math, science, technology, weather—we’ve got it all and then some. Answering these STEM-themed questions is sure to help you feel like a real scientist.
- Question:
I’m not alive, but I can grow. I don’t have lungs, but I need air. I’m not a plant, but I need water. What am I?
- Answer: Fire
- Explanation: Fire grows as it burns. It needs oxygen to continue burning, and it needs water to be put out.
- Question:
I change shape but never disappear. I can be solid, liquid, or gas, and I’m found everywhere. What am I?
- Answer: Water
- Explanation: Water can be solid (ice), liquid (water), or gas (steam). It’s found everywhere on the planet, and even if it evaporates, it never really goes away.
- Question:
What goes down but never up?
- Answer: Rain
- Explanation: Rain falls down, but in its liquid state, water can’t fall up.
- Question:
Right now it’s midnight and it’s raining. The forecast for the next two days is clear. Will it be sunny in 24 hours?
- Answer: No
- Explanation: In 24 hours, it will be midnight again, so it will be dark out.
- Question:
Which is heavier, a ton of bricks or a ton of feathers? [13]
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- Answer: Neither
- Explanation: A ton of bricks and a ton of feathers both weigh the same–a ton!
- Question:
I can fill a room but I take up no space. What am I? [14]
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- Answer: Light
- Explanation: If you turn on a light or open a curtain, light can fill up a whole room, but light doesn’t take up space.
- Question:
What can run but can’t walk?
- Answer: Water
- Explanation: Flowing water is often called running water.
- Question:
Everyone has me but you can only lose me in the dark. What am I?
- Answer: A shadow
- Explanation: Everyone has a shadow, but you can’t see them when it’s dark.
- Question:
What can you hold in your left hand but not in your right hand?
- Answer: Your right elbow.
- Question:
I can fly without wings. I can cry but don’t have eyes. What am I?
- Answer: A cloud
- Explanation: Clouds fly, but they don’t have wings. They rain (or “cry”), but they don’t have eyes.
- Question:
It has keys but no locks and space but no room. You can enter, but you can’t go inside. What is it?
- Answer: A keyboard
- Explanation: The buttons on a keyboard are called the keys. Keyboards also have a space key and an enter key.
- Question:
I make a loud sound when I’m changing. When I change, I get bigger but I weigh less. What am I? [15]
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- Answer: Popcorn
- Explanation: Popcorn makes a loud sound when it “changes,” or pops. Also, the kernels get bigger and lighter.
- Question:
What is always in front of you but can never be seen?
- Answer: The future
- Question:
I’m not alive, but I can grow. I don’t have lungs, but I need air. I’m not a plant, but I need water. What am I?
Section 5 of 9:
Animals & Nature
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Quiz yourself on the natural world. Do you love animals, nature, and the great outdoors? Then you’ll love these animal- and nature-themed questions—whether you’re answering them yourself or testing a friend! Can you figure them all out?
- Question:
What jumps when it walks and sits when it stands? [16]
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- Answer: A kangaroo
- Question:
I sleep in the day and fly at night, but I don’t have feathers to help my flight. What am I?
- Answer: A bat
- Explanation: Bats are nocturnal and they fly, but they don’t have feathers
- Question:
I can honk without using a horn. What am I?
- Answer: A goose
- Question:
The alphabet goes from A to Z, but my name goes from Z to A. What am I?
- Answer: A zebra
- Question:
I have horns but can’t beep, I bleat but I’m not a sheep. What am I?
- Answer: A goat
- Question:
I have plenty of needles but don’t know how to sew. What am I? [17]
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- Answer: A porcupine
- Question:
I can’t do anything but point, but I lead people all over the world. What am I?
- Answer: A compass
- Explanation: The arrow on a compass points north, which helps people navigate.
- Question:
What kind of room has no walls or corners? [18]
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- Answer: A mushroom
- Explanation: This one is a play on words—a mushroom doesn’t have walls or corners!
- Question:
A rooster is sitting on the west side of a roof facing north. If it lays an egg, which direction will it roll?
- Answer: Roosters don’t lay eggs
- Question:
What jumps when it walks and sits when it stands? [16]
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Section 6 of 9:
Planets
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Test your knowledge of our solar system. Channel your inner astronaut with these fun planetary questions. Or, quiz your favorite astronomy-loving friend. If you can get them all right, you’re really out of this world !
- Question:
I’m your home and the third planet from the Sun. What am I?
- Answer: Earth
- Question:
I’m the planet with the most rings. What am I? [19]
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- Answer: Saturn
- Question:
I’m red all over because of my dust. What am I?
- Answer: Mars
- Question:
I’m closest to the Sun, and I’m small and speedy. What am I?
- Answer: Mercury
- Question:
I’ve got rings and I’m tilted sideways. I’m not Saturn—What am I?
- Answer: Uranus
- Question:
I’m a gas giant and the biggest planet in our solar system. What am I?
- Answer: Jupiter
- Question:
I’m the hottest planet even though I’m not closest to the Sun. What am I?
- Answer: Venus
- Question:
I’m covered in storms that last for hundreds of years. What am I?
- Answer: Neptune
- Question:
You’ll find me in Mercury, Earth, Mars, Saturn, and Jupiter, but not in Venus, Neptune, or Pluto. What am I? [20]
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Research source
- Answer: The letter “R.”
- Question:
I’m round, but I’m not a ball. I’m in space, but I’m not a star. I have layers, but I’m not a cake. What am I?
- Answer: Earth
- Explanation: Earth is round, in space, and covered in layers that reach deep under the ground’s surface.
- Question:
I’m your home and the third planet from the Sun. What am I?
Section 7 of 9:
Math
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Try these riddles if you love tricky word problems. These brain-teasers combine math and riddles, so they’re sure to be challenging (in a fun way). But don’t worry—there’s no long division required. How many can you get right?
- Question:
When Sarah was 6, her sister was half her age. Now Sarah is 10. How old is her sister? [21]
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- Answer: 7
- Explanation: Half of 6 is 3, so Sarah’s sister is 3 years younger than her. Now that Sarah is 10, her sister is 3 years younger, or 7 years old.
- Question:
Two fathers and two sons went fishing. Each of them caught a fish—for a total of 3 fish. How is this possible?
- Answer: There are only 3 people
- Explanation: It was a grandfather, father, and grandson—two of them are fathers and two of them are sons, but there are only 3 people total.
- Question:
Kayla was 9 the day before yesterday, but next year she’ll turn 12. How can that be?
- Answer: Today is January 1st and Kayla’s birthday is December 31st
- Explanation: The day before yesterday (December 30th), Kayla was 9. She turned 10 on December 31st. She’ll turn 11 on December 31st of this year and 12 on December 31st of next year.
- Question:
Mrs. Jia has 5 daughters. Each daughter has a brother. How many children does Mrs. Jia have? [22]
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- Answer: 6
- Explanation: Each daughter has the same brother, so Mrs. Jia has 5 daughters and 1 son.
- Question:
What can you put between 7 and 8 to make a number that’s more than 7 but less than 8?
- Answer: A decimal point
- Explanation: The number 7.8 is more than 7 but less than 8.
- Question:
What do you need to do to make the equation 801 = 81 x 9 true?
- Answer: Turn it upside down
- Explanation: Upside-down, the equation would say 6 x 18 = 108.
- Question:
Double it and multiply it by 4. Then divide it by 8 and you’ll have it once more. What is it?
- Answer: Any number
- Explanation: Doubling a number then multiplying it by 4 is the same as multiplying it by 8 (2 x 4). So dividing it by 8 again will give you the original number.
- Question:
What 3 numbers give you the same result when you add them or multiply them together? [23]
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- Answer: 1, 2, and 3
- Explanation: 1 + 2 + 3 = 6, and 1 x 2 x 3 = 6.
- Question:
I am an odd number. Take away a letter and I become even. What am I?
- Answer: 7
- Explanation: Removing the letter “s” from the word “seven” makes it the word “even.”
- Question:
I’m a 3-digit number that starts with 1. My tens digit is 6 more than my ones digit. My hundreds digit is 7 less than my tens digit. What number am I?
- Answer: 182.
- Explanation: The number starts with 1, so the hundreds digit is 1. The hundreds digit is 7 less than the tens digit, so the tens digit has to be 8. The ones digit is 6 less than the tens digit, so it has to be 2.
- Question:
What do the numbers 11, 69, and 88 have in common? [24]
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- Answer: They’re all the same upside-down.
- Question:
When Sarah was 6, her sister was half her age. Now Sarah is 10. How old is her sister? [21]
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Research source
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Section 8 of 9:
Tricky
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These questions are sure to challenge you. If the questions so far have been a piece of cake, try out these extra-hard brain teasers. Only the best of the best will be able to get all of these right—do you have what it takes?
- Question:
If I have it, I don’t share it. If I share it, I don’t have it. What is it?
- Answer: A secret
- Explanation: If you keep something to yourself, it’s a secret. Once you share it, it isn’t a secret anymore.
- Question:
What goes away as soon as you talk about it? [25]
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Research source
- Answer: Silence
- Explanation: If you talk about silence, it isn’t silent anymore.
- Question:
I’m very tall when I’m young but I get shorter as I get older. What am I?
- Answer: A candle
- Explanation: The longer you burn a candle, the shorter it gets.
- Question:
I’m as light as a feather but no one can hold me for long. What am I? [26]
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Research source
- Answer: Breath
- Explanation: Air isn’t heavy, but it’s hard to hold your breath for long!
- Question:
You’re running a race, and at the end, you pass the person in 2nd place. What place did you finish? [27]
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- Answer: 2nd
- Explanation: If you’re in 3rd place and you pass the person who’s in 2nd place, you’re now in 2nd place.
- Question:
What can jump higher than a building?
- Answer: Anything—buildings can’t jump!
- Question:
What goes up but never back down? [28]
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Research source
- Answer: Your age
- Explanation: Your age goes up every year and never comes down.
- Question:
Grandpa went for a walk in the rain and forgot his umbrella. When he got home, his clothes were soaked but his hair wasn’t wet. How?
- Answer: Grandpa is bald.
- Question:
In a one-story house at the end of the street, the living room was red, the bedrooms were yellow, and the kitchen was blue. What color were the stairs?
- Answer: It’s a one-story house so there are no stairs.
- Question:
What runs all around the backyard but never moves?
- Answer: A fence
- Question:
I have cities without houses, forests but no trees, and water but no fish. What am I?
- Answer: A map
- Question:
The more of me you take, the more you leave behind. What am I?
- Answer: Footsteps
- Question:
What can go up a chimney down, but not down a chimney up?
- Answer: An umbrella
- Explanation: If your umbrella is closed (or down), you can pass it up a chimney. But if it’s open (or up), you can’t put it down a chimney.
- Question:
If an electric train is traveling south, which way is the smoke blowing?
- Answer: Nowhere—electric trains don’t have smoke.
- Question:
If I have it, I don’t share it. If I share it, I don’t have it. What is it?
Section 9 of 9:
Silly
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Get giggling with these silly riddles. Sometimes, the best riddles are the ones that make you laugh. These funny riddles are sure to get you giggling. Read through them for a laugh, or try them out on your friends to share the fun.
- Question:
In Africa, elephants are called “Lala.” In Asia, elephants are called “Lulu.” What do you call an elephant in Antarctica?
- Answer: Lost
- Question:
Imagine you’re in a room with no windows or doors. How will you get out?
- Answer: Stop imagining!
- Question:
What kind of music do bunnies listen to?
- Answer: Hip-hop
- Question:
I’m orange, wear a green hat, and sound like a parrot. What am I? [29]
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Research source
- Answer: A carrot
- Question:
What’s the saddest fruit?
- Answer: A blueberry
- Question:
What do you get if you cross a snowman and a vampire?
- Answer: Frostbite
- Question:
What do elves call the ABCs?
- Answer: The elf-abet
- Question:
What does a ghost use to wash its hair?
- Answer: Sham-boo
- Question:
What kind of band never plays music? [30]
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Research source
- Answer: A rubber band
- Question:
Which one of Santa’s reindeer loves Valentine’s Day?
- Answer: Cupid
- Question:
What kind of ball doesn’t bounce?
- Answer: A snowball
- Question:
How do snowmen lose weight?
- Answer: They wait for warmer weather
- Question:
What tastes better than it smells? [31]
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Research source
- Answer: Your tongue
- Question:
What kind of coat should be put on wet?
- Answer: A coat of paint
- Question:
If you drop a red hat in the Yellow Sea, what does it become?
- Answer: Wet
- Question:
Why do bees have sticky hair?
- Answer: They use honeycombs
- Question:
What’s black, white, and blue?
- Answer: A sad zebra
- Question:
Why are teddy bears never hungry? [32]
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Research source
- Answer: Because they’re always stuffed
- Question:
In Africa, elephants are called “Lala.” In Asia, elephants are called “Lulu.” What do you call an elephant in Antarctica?
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References
- ↑ https://www.weareteachers.com/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.letsroam.com/explorer/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.letsroam.com/explorer/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.today.com/parents/parents/riddles-for-kids-rcna46686
- ↑ https://www.weareteachers.com/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.today.com/parents/parents/riddles-for-kids-rcna46686
- ↑ https://www.letsroam.com/explorer/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.weareteachers.com/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.today.com/parents/parents/riddles-for-kids-rcna46686
- ↑ https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.weareteachers.com/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.today.com/parents/parents/riddles-for-kids-rcna46686
- ↑ https://www.today.com/parents/parents/riddles-for-kids-rcna46686
- ↑ https://www.letsroam.com/explorer/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.weareteachers.com/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.weareteachers.com/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.weareteachers.com/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.today.com/parents/parents/riddles-for-kids-rcna46686
- ↑ https://www.letsroam.com/explorer/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.letsroam.com/explorer/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.today.com/parents/parents/riddles-for-kids-rcna46686
- ↑ https://www.weareteachers.com/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.letsroam.com/explorer/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.collegetransitions.com/blog/riddles-for-kids/
- ↑ https://www.today.com/parents/parents/riddles-for-kids-rcna46686
- ↑ https://www.weareteachers.com/riddles-for-kids/
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