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77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
Funny,JokesMAR 20, 2026

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately

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A great comeback (not the Kim Kardashian kind) is like an Uno reverse card – it gives bullies of all ages a taste of their own medicine. But how many times have you thought of the perfect comeback after the fact?
Well, we're here to help you prepare for your next insult with these scorching hot roasts that people shared in an online thread. One netizen asked on Reddit, "What is the greatest comeback to an insult you've ever heard?" and people came in guns blazing.
Take out your pens and your notepads (or just pull up your Notes app, probably), Pandas, and write these gems down. You never know when you might need to rip somebody a new one to defend your honor.

#1

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
Gordon Ramsay asks his daughter on-camera, “So what’s it like being the daughter of the most famous chef in the world?”

His daughter replies, “I wouldn’t know; Jamie Oliver’s not my dad.”

Boom. Roasted.
101points

#2

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
Here's my favorite self-burn.

In high school math class. A nice, nerdy guy named Richard. A jerk whose name I forget, let's call him Jerk. Jerk keeps calling Richard "D**k." Like, "Hey, D**k, did you get the answer to #4?" Richard keeps calmly saying "It's Richard." Finally the teacher says "Richard, what do you prefer to be called?" Richard says "I prefer Richard." Jerk says "Well I prefer D**k."

After a few seconds of uproarious laughter from the rest of the class, Jerk realized what he said and sunk as far down in his seat as possible and never bugged Richard again.

We were teenagers in the 80s so this was the height of hilarity.
91points

#3

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
Just out of curiosity as to how good this actually was, for years, I was told that my sort-of-comeback was the best thing that anybody had ever heard, mostly because I was the quiet kid that nobody could get a rise out of. Naturally, because they couldn't get a rise out of me, everybody tried to get me flustered by insulting me, or framing me for things that no teacher ever believed because it was never the quiet kid.

Essentially, I walked into class one day, and the teacher wasn't there, but this other girl, S, was up at the whiteboard writing out a long-running joke about our teacher that pissed him off. It was about his assigned teacher number, and two years of developing a joke is a bit hard to explain. It became a bit of an inside joke. Either way, I sat down, she finished, and the teacher came in, noticing what was written on the board. He asked who did it, and immediately, this girl and a few of the girls around her said, "Sebaren did it!" Note, we were about 15 at the time, so they should have been beyond this.

I don't know what it was, but something made me wordlessly walk up to the board, fix her spelling and punctuation errors, and then sit down. Only when I had sat down did I turn to the girl who'd done it to say, "I have standards." The class collectively lost their minds, including the girls who hadn't seen it coming, and the teacher laughed so hard he went red in the face and cried. To me, it seems like they just found it so funny because it was me because I don't see anything particularly special or savage about it.
74points

Why do we feel such a need to come up with a clever comeback after we're insulted? Perhaps it's because of how we, or rather, our bodies, react to insults. When a person says something mean to us, our bodies go into fight-or-flight mode. Essentially, we can't come up with a witty reply because our brains just go blank.

As Brooklyn-based therapist Kerry McBroome explains it, our bodies take verbal insults as threats. "When someone says something offensive or harmful that hurts us or hurts a member of a community that's really important to us, our nervous system can get activated," she explained to TIME magazine.

#4

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
I was in 1st grade and we were on the bus about to go home, and some mean bully yelled at me and it went like this.

Bully: Hey (My name) why are you so gay!!!?

Me: Because I like to copy you!

Bus: OoooOOoOHHhhhhhH

That was the best comeback i have ever made, and the kid behind me said “Ha nice” then like bro slapped my hand and I felt soo cool.

Later in 7th grade I figured out I was gay sooo, Checkmate bully...
68points

#5

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
This wasn’t an insult personally but it was a comeback on behalf of a nation. My father is irish and he used to work in California. One day a particularly condescending colleague complimented my dad’s work by saying ‘I never thought I’d get to meet an intelligent Irishman’. To which my dad replied ‘hopefully someday I’ll be as fortunate with Americans’, which went completely over his colleagues’ head.
Report
65points

#6

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
I heard a story once about some girls in an elevator who were insulting some black guy in another language they thought he didn't understand (Hindi I think) specifically commenting on his "ugly black face". Apparently the guy waited til the elevator reached his floor, looked at them, and in perfect hindi said "Better to have an ugly face than an ugly heart" and left.
Report
64points

The reality is that insults really hurt, and not just metaphorically. Apparently, insults can cause us actual physical pain, not just hurt our self-esteem. In 2022, researchers from the Netherlands concluded that hearing phrases like "You are a liar" has a similar effect to a slap in the face.

That's why having a ready comeback at all times makes us feel safer. "There's something really life-affirming about having something to say ready to go in your back pocket," McBroome added." Pulling off a sharp response can boost your confidence and be such a source of pride."

#7

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
My dear Grandmother. She had a quick and savage wit.

My fiance and I held a 'meet the whole family' get together at my house.
It was the first time his father met my grandmother.

His dad was a large, physically intimidating man with a beer gut.

He began telling stories to my grandmother about how my fiance was a mischief maker when he was young.
Then told my grandmother how he would take off his belt and whip Joe for being bad.

My frail little grandmother stares directly at my hubby's dad's tummy and says, "Your belt? How ever could you find it?"

Future father-in-law was gobsmacked.
63points

#8

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
Winston Churchill is attributed some great ones:

Lady Astor: "Mr. Churchill, you're drunk."

Churchill: "Yes madam, and you are ugly, but tomorrow I shall be sober."

and also

Lady Astor: "Winston, if you were my husband, I'd poison your tea." 

Churchill: "Nancy, if I were your husband, I'd drink it.".
62points

#9

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
Teacher: *asks a tough question*

Jimmy: *says the correct answer*

Karen: lol you‘re such a nerd

Teacher: Be nice to him Karen, he could be your boss someday

Jimmy: it‘s okay Teacher, i have no interest on being a pimp anyway

*whole class losing their minds*.
61points

That familiar feeling of missing the beat when you need a witty comeback the most, even has its own name. L'esprit de l'escalier, or staircase wit, is used to describe the phenomenon of when a comeback comes to us too late. The term comes from the Parisian salons of the past, where gentlemen liked to debate each other. Alas, their best arguments would always come to them after the fact – as they were climbing the staircase.

As Maggie Rowe writes for Psychology Today, this does not make us flawed; it just makes us human. In fact, if you haven't got a selection of scorching-hot comebacks at the ready, you're probably going to blank again and again in situations where you get insulted.

#10

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
A teacher once tried making out that me and another student were gay. So I waited for the class to settle down and said "you seem to have an obsession with gay little boys sir" I have never seen a class kick off like it and to this day it's one of my proudest moments.
58points

#11

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
Private Hudson: Hey Vasquez, have you ever been mistaken for a man?

Private Vasquez: No. Have you?
57points

#12

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
My favorite when I was younger...people liked to call others gay as an insult. When other kids would ask, "Are you gay? I think you're gay!" I'd simply reply, "Now don't you go getting your hopes up.".
56points

The only advice I ever got from my parents about bullying and comebacks was to turn the other cheek. "The bully is always the one who is hurting more, at the end of the day," they would say. While it was very compassionate and admirable advice, perhaps it wasn't always that helpful. In fact, experts say that sometimes the best reaction to an insult is a calmly set boundary.

#13

Kid in class “I don’t have a problem with people being gay in their houses, I just don’t want to see it out in the world. I don’t like looking at it, it disgusts me.”

“I don’t like looking at ugly people but nobody is making you wear a bag over your face”.
47points

#14

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
When someone interrupts me:

"I'm sorry, did the middle of my sentence interrupt the start of yours?".
46points

#15

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
My former friend was 12 years my senior and she fancied herself pretty heavily. She was OK, but I doubt anyone was losing sleep over her. Dressed waaaaaay too young, trying to hold on to her youth.


One day she pointed out that I was overweight and dumpy-looking next to her. I'd finally had enough (she made these comments often) and I said, "Well what about you?"


"Excuse me?!" she snapped, "I have the body of a 22 year old!"


"Well give it back, you're stretching it out!".
45points

When someone insults us, our monkey brains immediately go for revenge: we want to "get" and hurt the person like they just did to us. But Oxford-based psychiatrist Neel Burton, M.D., says that there's not much benefit from a comeback. "The witty put-down does have a place, but only among friends, and only to add to the merriment. And it ought to be followed by a token of reconciliation such as a toast or a pat on the shoulder."

#16

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
The best comeback I’ve heard was “you are the human equivalent of a participation award”.
45points

#17

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
A neighborhood kid was picking on my daughter, and she replied with:

"I'm sorry you are so sad."

Kid just walked away.
43points

#18

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
In a heated argument my mom called my brother a Son of A B. He replied, "you got that right".
37points

So, what's the most effective way to react to an insult? According to Burton, it's rebuking the insulter. "When it comes to people with whom we have an ongoing personal or professional relationship, [...] it may be preferable to 'have a quiet word' (quiet, but firm) in a bid to reassert our boundaries." So, however fun and satisfying comebacks may be, sometimes it's best to just do the grown-up thing.

#19

77 Savage Comebacks That Ended The Argument Immediately
A friend of mine in first year university had never really dated any girls yet. This dumb guy that we were kind of friends with told him, "When you do get a girlfriend, I'm totally going to do her."

He responded, "If I had a girlfriend that would do you, her cheating on me wouldn't be the issue."
37points

#20

Was once criticized by an older family member for having a stray tooth that gave me a bit of a craggy smile as an adolescent (it has settled in nicely). I was raised to not criticize what people can't help and to give compliments where possible and so I did just that, sorta.



Aunt: Nice crocodile smile!

Me: Uh, thanks...

Aunt: It's just that tooth, you know, makes your smile all crooked but it's not that bad. You could get it fixed.

Me: I suppose but I know I'll never have teeth as nice as yours are. They are like stars.

Aunt: Like stars? You mean as in bright?

Me: No, as in they come out at night.



My uncle had given me a book called, 1001 Insults for Every Occasion, a while earlier and that gem was in it.
36points
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