Wow, I didn't even think of that. Pretty Funny. Wouldn't one assume that walking into a business and ordering food constitutes notice that they'll charge you?
^read the faq before you act like a jerk (anonymously, of course). it's not about pointing out errors, it's about intentionally misinterpreting oddly placed quotation marks.
Anonymous, I really think that you should've put quotation marks around "Chinese" ... with all this talk about unnecessary usage of quotation marks, let's not forget that quotation marks are necessary sometimes!
This is also just bad design in general. Disclaimers about pricing are pretty common on restaurant publications but you almost always want to de-emphasize them. You don't want to put it in large text, with it's own color, highlight it with a box, and in a flashy script font. And of course the unnecessary quotation marks just add insult to injury.
As good as this one is, I'm tempted to believe it's simply an erroneous translation. It's common enough to see something along the lines of "Prices subject to change without notice" on a menu, so I'm willing to assume that's what they were aiming for. I'd like to thank whoever translated it for them, though!
Wow, this one rocks pretty hard
ReplyDeleteBut even so, I'll say it before some anonymous a**hole does:
ReplyDelete"Maybe it's their slogan or a quote from a staff member!"
...As if that makes it better...
"Changing the price without notice" sounds like their slogan, as jeff said, or their mission statement. :^)
ReplyDelete^
ReplyDeletehehehe, I'm starting to think it just needs a "...since 1985" to REALLY be a classic
I couldn't tell if it was "changing" or "charging." It almost looked like the latter.
ReplyDeleteWow, I didn't even think of that. Pretty Funny. Wouldn't one assume that walking into a business and ordering food constitutes notice that they'll charge you?
ReplyDeleteAnn, I'm 99.99% sure that the letter in question is "n." It looks like the penultimate letter in that word, not like the second letter in "Price."
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad other people get a kick out of this one as much as I do. =)
The item itself is funny, but the comment about it fails to capitalize Chinese, which is pretty ironic on a blog about other people's errors.
ReplyDelete^read the faq before you act like a jerk (anonymously, of course). it's not about pointing out errors, it's about intentionally misinterpreting oddly placed quotation marks.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous, I really think that you should've put quotation marks around "Chinese" ... with all this talk about unnecessary usage of quotation marks, let's not forget that quotation marks are necessary sometimes!
ReplyDeleteThis is also just bad design in general. Disclaimers about pricing are pretty common on restaurant publications but you almost always want to de-emphasize them. You don't want to put it in large text, with it's own color, highlight it with a box, and in a flashy script font. And of course the unnecessary quotation marks just add insult to injury.
ReplyDeleteJust found the site, I think this is my new, most favorite ever "slogan". I will use it on my business cards.
ReplyDelete-M
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ReplyDeleteGreat observation done!!!
ReplyDeleteFantastic collection of pictures. Really nice one.
As good as this one is, I'm tempted to believe it's simply an erroneous translation. It's common enough to see something along the lines of "Prices subject to change without notice" on a menu, so I'm willing to assume that's what they were aiming for. I'd like to thank whoever translated it for them, though!
ReplyDelete