Triple

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In mathematics, a triple is an n-tuple with n being 3. A triple is a sequence of three elements. It is not a set of three elements, as the ordering of the elements matters, and an element can be present more than once in the same triple. Derived from this abstract meaning it is used in several other contexts.

Contents

Triples in Humor

A triple is a joke consisting of three statements. The first two statements are similar, usually "straight lines", and establish a pattern which the third statement does not follow.

For example:

John was a quiet gentleman who liked to:

  1. work in the garden
  2. read literary works
  3. go on killing sprees from rooftops with his sniper rifle

Obviously, the third violent activity does not follow the first two benign ones. This may be found humorous.

Other examples include lists, of names for example, where the third is in contrast with the previous two.

"It's one thing to see death coming at the hands of your own creation. Oedipus and his father. Baron Frankenstein and his monster. William Henry Gates and Windows '09." -- David Brin, Kiln People

Here is another typical example, by Woody Allen, in Love and Death:

"If only I could see a miracle, like a burning bush, or the seas part, or my Uncle Sasha pick up a check!"

There are endless variations. Good ones can have a joke within a joke, such as this exchange from All in the Family where the subject of cities with the same names has come up:

Mike: "Portland, Oregon; Portland, Maine."
Gloria: "Springfield, Illinois; Springfield, Massachusetts."
Edith ('Dingbat'): "New York, New York!"

See also

Triples in Music

In music triple refers to triple meter and triplets. See also simple meter and compound meter.

Triples in RDF

In RDF a triple is a subject-predicate-object expression.

Triples in Sport