katiebcartoons

14 Body Part Pun Cartoons

For your funny bones!

In this pun on picking your nose, we see two kid team captains picking teams for a PE basketball game. The kid whose choice it is at the moment looks between the two remaining choices - a kid and a giant anthropomorphic nose - and picks her nose.
You can pick your friends. You can pick your nose. But you can’t pick your friend’s nose.
In this play on having a crick in your neck, a doctor examines a patient's neck and sees that indeed she has a little crick, that is, if you are saying "creek" in a southern accent. The creek on the patient's back has a kayaker and a swimmer in it.
On a related note, I have a little crick in my neck (no sign of kayakers yet).
In this pun on eye test, we see someone looking at pictures of different body parts. They are asked to identify which are eyes.
I would probably fail this version of the eye test too. (In other news, it seems like I only draw optometrist-centric cartoons now!)
In this pun on the phrase you've stolen my heart, we see a robber running away with someone's heart (as in the human organ) while that person, chest ripped open and spurting blood, stands there in shock.
Craigslist: great for connecting with missed connections and buying organs!
In this pun on finger food, we see anthropomorphic fingers on a hand enjoying some delicious food.
Of course, the best finger foods are lady fingers and chicken fingers.
Two anthropomorphic hands run across a finish line at the same time.
I’m so sorry, I’d love to help, but my hands are running a 5K.
In this pun on mouth guard, we see a mouth with a walkie talkie acting as a bouncer.
Why do people need these for sports?
In this pun on ear worm, we see a music lover with an actual earthworm in his ears. It would be quite disturbing if the worm weren't so smiley.
Perhaps the only thing more horrifying than an actual worm in your ear is being haunted by the intro to "Toxic."
In this pun on the painful experience of throwing your back out, a woman with a chunk of back missing throws the missing chunk into the garbage can.
I know, I know, I should have recycled it.
In this pun on Evelyn Waugh's novel Brideshead Revisited, we see a person visiting, yet again, a disembodied bride's head, and the person says, "Yes, just as spooky as I remembered."
Why would anyone write a novel about this?