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That’s a flavor I never would have guessed



engrish funny iraq government

Sesame buns
The butter pastes the cake
Wheatcake
Duck cake
Mixed sea food Iraq government office surface
Fried Rice with Meat and Vegetables

Submitted by: Tala via Engrish Funny Submissions

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» Glory! 156 Comment

  1. Alice says:

    First B1TCHES!!!!!

    • PoodleGroomer says:

      Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (Arabic: صدام حسين عبد المجيد التكريتي Ṣaddām Ḥusayn ʿAbd al-Majīd al-Tikrītī; April 28, 1937 – December 30, 2006) was the President of Iraq from July 16, 1979 until April 9, 2003. A leading member of the revolutionary Ba’ath Party, which espoused secular pan-Arabism, economic modernization, and Arab socialism, Saddam played a key role in the 1968 coup that brought the party to long-term power.
      As vice president under the ailing General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, and at a time when many groups were considered capable of overthrowing the government, Saddam created security forces through which he tightly controlled conflict between the government and the armed forces. In the early 1970s, Saddam spearheaded Iraq’s nationalization of the Western-owned Iraq Petroleum Company, which had long held a monopoly on the country’s oil. Through the 1970s, Saddam cemented his authority over the apparati of government as Iraq’s economy grew at a rapid pace.
      As president, Saddam maintained power during the Iran–Iraq War of 1980 through 1988, and throughout the Persian Gulf War of 1991. During these conflicts, Saddam suppressed several movements, particularly Shi’a and Kurdish movements seeking to overthrow the government or gain independence, respectively. Whereas some Arabs venerated him for his aggressive stance against foreign intervention and for his support for the Palestinians, other Arabs and Western leaders vilified him as the force behind both a deadly attack on northern Iraq in 1988 and, two years later, an invasion of Kuwait to the south.
      By 2003, the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush—in place following the elections of 2000—had convinced the public that Saddam remained sufficiently relevant and dangerous to be overthrown. In March of that year, the U.S. and its allies invaded Iraq, eventually deposing Saddam. Captured by U.S. forces on December 13, 2003, Saddam was brought to trial under the Iraqi interim government set up by U.S.-led forces. On November 5, 2006, he was convicted of charges related to the 1982 killing of 148 Iraqi Shi’ites suspected of planning an assassination attempt against him, and was sentenced to death by hanging. Saddam was executed on December 30, 2006. By the time of his death, Saddam had become a prolific author. Among his work are multiple novels dealing with themes of romance, politics, and war.

  2. dethscul says:

    Patron’s food:
    Waitress: Is that a duck in your cake, or are you just happy to see me?

  3. sopranomom says:

    HHhhhhhmmmmm… Tastes like sand… and maybe a little bit of IED?

  4. dethscul says:

    Mixed sea food banned by Iraq government office surface! NOT HALAL!

  5. ... says:

    It looks like someone tried to use a bad online translator and copy/pasted both the translation and a google ad or a news ticker with it.

  6. PoodleGroomer says:

    I found the map to the missing “WMD’s” covered with oyster sauce. NOT HALAL!

    • dr handle says:

      Yeah, well, *you* try getting all those damned oysters to face east whilst you harvest ‘em, then keep ‘em facing east until you shuck ‘em. They are thoroughly uncooperative. Damned apostate seafood.

      • Aoife says:

        Oysters are halal, all fish is fine as long as it wasn’t dead before you got it out of the water. You don’t use dhabīḥah slaughter techniques on fish, and even then, if I recall correctly, the animal doesn’t have to be facing Mecca (not east as that is dependent on where you are, obviously) during slaughter if it isn’t possible, but should be during the pre-slaughter rituals involving making sure the animal is fed, drinks, and is calm…. though I think it’s a issue of contention anyhow, as it’s being accepted by some islamic authorities that it is impractical to have for instance thousands of poultry a day slaughtered facing the same way in a factory, and sometimes they just ensure the workers face Mecca, and so forth.

        But mostly I just wanted to point out that oysters are totally halal.

        They’re not kosher though…

      • Aoife says:

        Oysters are halal, all fish is fine as long as it wasn’t dead before you got it out of the water. You don’t use dhabīḥah slaughter techniques on fish, so oysters are totally halal.

        They’re not kosher though…

  7. JohnB says:

    I’ll have the mixed seafood. Hold the Iraq Government Office Surface, please!

  8. Gone_with_the_Wendell says:

    this butter pasting the cake…

    …it…

    …makes me…

    …tingle.

  9. tehexile says:

    mmmm nuke food

  10. D.R. says:

    So does that mean you’re eating a filing cabinet?

  11. kkrou says:

    anyone can tell me what should be the right translation?

  12. Someone says:

    The economical crisis must’ve hit Iraq hard, if they even sell government office surface’s.

  13. the menu writer has a very odd case of tourettes syndrome?

  14. VurtualRuler98 says:

    Whoever finds Saddam has to buy the next one? Or is that only on Mardi Gras?

  15. Semantic says:

    MMMmmmmmmmmmmMMMMmmmm… I can never get enough of my Iraq government office surface!

  16. Meowth says:

    I think I’ll just watch while the butter pastes the cake…

  17. PH says:

    KK Rou,
    The right translation should be “3 types of Seafood Egg Noodles”

    The person translating the menu might have just used a online dictionary.

    Why Iraq Government came out is because of the 3rd and 4th characters in the chinese (Kanji).

    They are pronounced “YI” and “FU” respectively but at the same time the same characters also refers to abbreviated name of the Iraq Government.

    In its original form, Iraq Government is “YI LA KE ZHENG FU”
    (YI LA KE refer to Iraq, ZHENG FU refer to government”

    It is common in Chinese to take the first and last characters of a phrase to refer something that could be easily understood.

    But here’s the side effect we see….

    • JohnB says:

      Just as I suspected! The Iraqi government is being run by three egg noodles!

    • Mark. Gooley says:

      I’m always deeply gratified when someone with enough knowledge of Chinese (or whatever other language) figures out how these arose and is kind enough to explain. Thank you. I know English and a fair amount of German, and that’s all, and funny as some of these are, I really do want to know their genesis as well.

      • jnettie says:

        Agreed!

        I understand a little bit of Cantonese, but can’t read it, though I understand Chinese language structure. My Dad has been studying Chinese calligraphy and has explained that a lot of the simplified characters also take out certain of the “poetic” factors of traditional characters. Easier for computers, bad for understanding.

  18. PH says:

    forgot to add,

    Why “surface” came about is due to the last character.

    It has multiple meanings depending on the context,

    either as noodles (only in Simplified Chinese)
    or surface
    or one’s face

    • Meowth says:

      What about the butter pastes the cake? Or is the cake just a lie?

      • Meowth says:

        You also forgot to explain “office.”

        • Moose says:

          Chinese, especially the Chinese from Mainland China, often omits characters. If my memory is correct, there’s some sort of tradition from long back which basically stated “your ink is valuable” (in other words, use it wisely!).

          So instead of putting, say, 卓面 (desk surface) we abbreviate and put only 面 (the last character in the menu item). The reader must interpret what the missing characters are (and if you know Chinese, it’s not very hard).

          面 has a multitude of meanings on its own. It can mean noodles, or…surface! Yes, surface! Now to figure out what was omitted, and somehow they came to the conclusion that the “office” part was missing so they took “office surface” as the correct translation.

      • naleta says:

        The cake is always a lie. And office is inexplicable. Only omnipotence can explain the inexplicable and we still would not understand.

        • PoodleGroomer says:

          Omnipotence allows you to walk through inpenitratable walls. Omniscience leads you to the door.

          • JohnB says:

            Omnipresence makes both the walls and the doors irrelevant. Makes theology a lot easier for pantheists and panentheists. (I am, incidentally, of the latter persuasion.)

            • dr handle says:

              You believe in a god of frypans?

              • tehexile says:

                i believe in the Pancreator.

                • JohnB says:

                  Then there are the parentheists (I am not one of them, though), who believe only what they read in appended but inserted passages.

                  • with_Apostrophe says:

                    John B – you comment is a thing of comedic beauty.

                    The only problem is that I’m not a parentheist, so I don’t know whether to believe your assertion that you’re not one either.

                  • Droll not Troll says:

                    Nicely put, but did you mean parentheSists? (I’m not sure I’ve ever seen either word).

                    • Droll not Troll says:

                      Oh, and I googled “panentheists”. That’s a really interesting angle on the God question.

                      • JohnB says:

                        I just made up “parentheists” as a play on “panentheists,” of course, although etymologically “parenthesists” would actually make more sense. But I am seriously a panentheist. Whenever I get into serious discussions with atheists I find that they don’t believe in a God that I don’t believe in either, even though I strongly believe in God.

      • hollyr57 says:

        Cake never lies! Only pudding lies.

        • PoodleGroomer says:

          What is the trustworthiness and truthiness of frozen custard?

          • hollyr57's embarrassed ghost says:

            Frozen custard is always pretending to be real ice cream. Not a lot of truthiness there!

          • toilet shark says:

            It depends on the flavour. For instance, you should demand a refund on your toilet shark flavoured ice-cream if it doesn’t bite back; that’s a sure indication that there are no actual sharks in it, they just got some flying sharks to leap over it a couple of times.

            • JohnB says:

              I doubt that I would ever even try toilet shark flavored ice cream; but if it bit me back, that would certainly be the last time!

    • naleta says:

      Did they just call the Iraq Government a noodle face? <..> o.O

    • griffinlady says:

      Mmmm… you make my Engrish fun and educational. ^_^ thanks or the translation

  19. hollyr57 says:

    The butter pastes the cake,
    The butter pastes the cake.
    Hi ho the derry-oh
    The butter pastes the cake!

    The cake takes the duck,
    The cake takes the duck….

    • Pointer says:

      shouldn’t it rather be “hi ho dairy-oh”, then?

      • hollyr57 says:

        DPH fairy will come and bonk you for that!

        • JohnB says:

          Regardless of the DPH fairy’s response or lack thereof (lately, she’s been a bit busy with the Toilet Shark business), I strongly advise you not to dare Io. You never know what Saturn’s moons might be up to!

      • dr handle says:

        Dreadful Pun Hell fairy can take time off from moonlighting as a toilet shark to say: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARGH! *clonk*

  20. toilet shark says:

    Geez, and you thought the idea of toilet shark flavoured ice-cream was off-putting…

    • hollyr57 says:

      Ok, Dr.Handle, you can’t fool us with your Toilet Shark disguise. I can tell it’s really you underneath that large gray fin, with your dead gray eyes…no wait, wait, no no no no…..Aaargh!

    • PoodleGroomer says:

      Alien .vs. Predator debate: Which is more dangerous, The flying toilet shark, or snakes in a toilet??

      • hollyr57 says:

        Just like in antique auctions, rarity is all. Snakes in a toilet or a lot more common than toilet sharks, or snakes in a plane, for that matter. Therefore snakes ina toilet, or on a plane, or in a tree are more dangerous, you see. I do not like them in the rain, I do not like them on a train, I do not like them in toilet, and if they’re there then I will boil it.

        *Grandma to 12 can recite Green Eggs & Ham by heart.*

        • JohnB says:

          Boil it in a toilet? Is that an available option on the Toto Wash Let? Or do you use a Circle Type Dish of Microwave?

        • toilet shark says:

          A toilet shark is also a lot easier to distract – just drop in a small scoop of ice-cream and flush, and the toilet shark will go racing off around the U-bend chasing the ice-cream.

  21. sadlier says:

    i’ll have to go with snakes in a toilet. just so you know, your debate is really random. no offense.

    • JohnB says:

      No offense, but your random is really a debate. And if you go with snakes in a toilet, you’ll be going in circles.

  22. K-Eon says:

    and after one day of unattentiveness, we end up with this, snakes in toilets, thank you and good night

    • JohnB says:

      Dreadful Spelling Sprite must *ding* the use of “unattentiveness.” The proper prefix is “in,” as in “inattentiveness.” The lack of capitalization and punctuation rate you two additional *dings*. But you’re welcome and good night.

    • dr handle says:

      You’ll find that on this website, strange tangent is not just an option, it’s a way of life…

      • hollyr57 says:

        And sometimes mandated. If not by the DPH and others of her ilk, by our own inner twistings and turnings.

        • JohnB says:

          Our inner circular dish of microwave.

          • JohnB says:

            And BTW, of what ilk is the DPH fairy???

            • dr handle says:

              Well, retributive fabulous (as in described in fable) beings, perhaps, which would include the Dreadful Pun Hell fairy, the Dreadful Spelling Sprite, and possibly the First Troll Lecturer. Not the toilet shark, though. Toilet sharks are REAL. Just ask holly. Ask to look at her toilet shark scars.

            • Droll not Troll says:

              Anne Ilk. That’s my theory.

  23. K-Eon says:

    and when i get the troll who poked mah eye out…

  24. curiousposes says:

    lol, (that’s all)

  25. Rivahcat says:

    The butter pastes the cake… or it gets the hose again.

  26. Jenny Taylia says:

    MEATCAKE!!! (thanks, George)

  27. Crite says:

    That’s even better than the drink I found on the menu at a restaurant in Xi’an, China. It was some sort of tea that was translated as “The Peru system Buddha jumps the wall”. I wish I had a picture of it.

  28. Jazman-Flickr says:

    While I was looking at this…
    an advertisement for Internet for US troops in Iraq o.o


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