ఇల్లంతాఎలుక బొక్కలు —
Explanation
The riddle describes a sieve (జల్లెడ) using the metaphor 'a mouse as big as a house with holes' — it cleverly plays on the sieve's defining characteristic of having numerous holes throughout its structure.
The riddle describes a sieve (జల్లెడ) using the metaphor 'a mouse as big as a house with holes' — it cleverly plays on the sieve's defining characteristic of having numerous holes throughout its structure.
నాలుగు కర్రల మధ్య నల్లని రాయి, ఏమిటి అది ?
This riddle answers 'a grinding stone' (పలక), which typically sits between four wooden legs of a grinding mortar stand. The riddle cleverly describes the stone's position and dark color to make the answer apt through visual imagery.
కజ్జికాయ
The riddle answer is 'mango' (a fruit that ripens from green to yellow). It's apt because 'kajji' means sour/unripe in Telugu, and 'kaya' means fruit, so the word literally describes a fruit in its unripe state before turning sweet and golden.
మొక్కజొన్న
This riddle refers to 'corn/maize' (the answer). The word playfully combines 'mok' (tree/plant) and 'jonnu' (grain), making it apt because corn is a grain that grows on a tall stalk like a tree, embodying both characteristics in a single plant.
కిరాయి
బొట్టు కాని బొట్టు, ఏమి బొట్టు?
This riddle's answer is 'taali bottu' (the vermillion dot worn on the forehead by married women). It's called a 'bottu' (dot) but isn't an ordinary dot—it's sacred, auspicious, and marks an important social status, making it uniquely significant in Telugu culture.
మొదట చప్పన, నడుమ పుల్లన, కొస కమ్మన, ఏమిటి అది ?
The riddle describes milk (white/sweet at first), yogurt (sour in the middle), and ghee (thick/solid at the end) — three dairy products made from the same base ingredient through different processes. It illustrates how a single source (milk) transforms into diverse forms, teaching that change and transformation are natural and valuable in life.