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The Ultimate Egg

Egg Jokes

The yolk's on you. Our hand-curated collection of egg humor, served sunny-side up.

science

An egg walks into a chemistry lab.

The professor says, 'Ah, a calcium carbonate vessel containing a colloidal suspension of proteins. Please, have a seat.'

Science observation: a chemist describes an egg accurately as a calcium carbonate vessel containing colloidal protein suspensions. The description is technically correct.

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science

Why did the egg study thermodynamics?

To understand why it can't be unboiled. (Except it technically can now — UC Irvine, 2015.)

Science fact (real): UC Irvine 2015 successfully unboiled eggs using centrifugal force. The joke references actual scientific achievement reversing so-called irreversible denaturation.

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science

How do eggs communicate?

Through the 7,000 to 17,000 pores in their shells. Nature's mesh network.

Science fact: eggshells contain 7,000 to 17,000 pores (actual verified range). These pores allow gas exchange and water loss, the egg breathes through its shell.

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science

What's the most important thing about an egg's structure?

The arch shape distributes stress evenly. Civil engineers are basically copying eggs.

Science context: egg-shaped arches distribute load evenly (engineering principle). Civil engineers study eggshell geometry because the arch shape is structurally optimal.

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science

Why did the egg white turn opaque?

Protein denaturation. It's not personal, it's biochemistry.

Science process: egg white protein denatures (changes structure) when heated. The opacity change is due to protein unfolding, the mechanism is biochemistry.

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science

What did the egg say to the centrifuge?

'You're tearing me apart!'

Science personification: an egg objects to being centrifuged (spun at high speed to separate components). Scientists use centrifuges to isolate egg fractions by density.

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science

What did the mitochondria say to the egg?

'I'm the powerhouse of the cell. You ARE the cell.'

Science fact: mitochondria are cellular power sources. Eggs are single cells, so the mitochondria's claim to importance applies to the entire egg-cell.

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science

What did the scientist say when he found two isotopes of helium in an egg?

'HeHe.'

Science pun: two helium isotopes (He-He) produce laughter sound. Scientists in a lab would identify calcium carbonate shells and proteins, not nuclear physics.

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science

Why did the biologist collect eggs?

They were studying cell structure and eggs are technically single cells.

Science context: eggs are technically single cells with a nucleus. Biologists study eggs for cell structure understanding, eggs serve as teaching specimens.

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science

How does a physicist describe a hard-boiled egg?

'A protein matrix that underwent irreversible denaturation via sustained thermal energy transfer.' Also breakfast.

Science terminology: hard-boiling involves protein denaturation via sustained heat. The process is irreversible under normal circumstances, which is the scientific baseline.

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science

What's an egg's favorite element?

Sulfur. They're naturally drawn to it, especially when overcooked.

Science context: overcooked eggs produce sulfur compounds (hydrogen sulfide). The greenish ring around the yolk contains sulfur, the chemical naturally present in egg proteins.

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science

Why do old eggs float?

Their air cell gets bigger as moisture escapes through the shell. It's not magic, it's Archimedes.

Science explanation: old eggs float because their air cell expands as internal moisture evaporates. Archimedes principle (buoyancy) applies, the science is accurate.

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Showing page 1 of 2 — 17 jokes total

The Weekly Scramble

One fact — One joke — One recipe.

The Weekly Scramble

The Weekly Scramble

One fact — One joke — One recipe.

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