foto: Facebook/Kementrian Humor Indonesia; Instagram/@wkwkland_real
Brilio.net - If you want to write in a public place , of course you need to be thorough and careful. Writing in public places usually contains announcements, advice, directions, advertisements, and/or brand names. Everything needs to be written well so that the message of the writing can be understood by the people who read it.
You may often see written announcements in mosque ablution areas, on the side of the road, on the walls of boarding houses, or on advertising billboards. Have you ever come across strange writing that when you read it makes you fail to understand?
Those of you who are confused when reading it might frown, thinking hard about the meaning of the writing. Like the row you can see below.
Compiled by brilio.net from various sources on Sunday (11/2) these 13 hilarious portraits of writing in public places make you fail to understand, reading it makes your forehead wrinkle!
1. Since when do you wash your hands with a mask? It's missing a semicolon, so it makes you fail to understand.
2. I thought the photo was cropped, but it turns out that's what it says. When you want to wash your feet, do you have to remove your feet?
3. The name of PAUD makes you think hard. Do their children play and study with the kuntilanak?
4. At first glance it makes you a little scared. But wait a minute, there's something strange.
5. It seems like the person who wrote it really likes the letter M.
6. Read the writing on this car, so you fail to understand and immediately hesitate to overtake it.
7. So, is this a snapshot of the future? The numbers are reversed, wow.
8. Women's underwear in English isn't like that, bro.
9. So who is this that is broken? The elevator or the life of the elevator guard?
10. One letter is missing and everyone who reads it will fail to understand.
11. To be a blunder, a brand this big made the wrong sign in front of their shop.
12. The definition of a loud empty barrel is in this advisory.
13. Fix, which makes writing in a bad mood. So writing a warning is only half done.
(brl/ola)