I Hardly Know Her

I Hardly Know Her. Butter? I hardly know her Scumbag hipster quickmeme i hardly know her! Usage notes [edit] The word used as the subject of the retort is always restated just before the retort is made It's used after someone says a word that ends in a sound similar to "-er," and the joke is to pretend like that word is a person's name.

Batter I hardly know her Meme Guy
Batter I hardly know her Meme Guy from memeguy.com

In common usage, the retort is made with almost any noun regardless of possible sexual innuendo for humorous effect The end result is a sentence that can be perceived as a sexual innuendo or some other joke but oftentimes makes absolutely no sense whatsoever

Batter I hardly know her Meme Guy

The phrase "I hardly know her" is actually a classic example of a specific type of pun joke, often called the "I hardly know her" punchline This entry was posted in Humor and tagged Joke, sarcasm, uplifting on March 29, 2024 by amkimura Example: "Liquor? I hardly know her!" because liquor sounds like "lick her" or "Poker? I hardly know her!" because it sounds like "poke her"

Poehler? Imgflip. It's just an unexpected twist, where a word like liquor sounds like a verb + her - "lick her". I hardly knew her!" I find them hilarious, but often forget them.

240+ RibTickling Gems Hardly Know Her Jokes Galore!. Then it became a meme of it's own rather than only an innuendo and is used with any "er" word, the only rule now seeming to be that the word used needs to sound like "[Verb] her" when you break it down. The joke comes from 90s TV culture and movies, but language experts are not sure of the exact origin of the phrase