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DFW

(60,668 posts)
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 09:07 AM 23 hrs ago

Best Welsh joke I ever heard.

There was a woman from Wales at a community breakfast that my wife helped organize this morning. She told me great story.

An American tourist couple was traveling through Wales and stopped off at a fast food place for a quick lunch. They were in the famed Welsh village of Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch. She and her husband ordered their burgers and fries, and the salesgirl asked if there was anything else she could do for them. The wife said, yes, actually. Would she please pronounce, very slowly, the name of the place in which they found themselves. The sales girl smiled sweetly and said "sure, it is pronounced "BUR - GER- KING."

37 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Best Welsh joke I ever heard. (Original Post) DFW 23 hrs ago OP
Woo-hoo! DFW is back! WestMichRad 22 hrs ago #1
I do feel OK, thanks. But that is the dangerous part DFW 21 hrs ago #13
Love it SuzyandPuffpuff 22 hrs ago #2
Home of the Whopperllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoc twodogsbarking 22 hrs ago #3
Yeah, but keep in mind, there are tourists to respect, so............ DFW 22 hrs ago #7
I'd like to buy a vowel. twodogsbarking 22 hrs ago #8
As you may have surmised by the way their towns are spelled DFW 21 hrs ago #12
Part of the problem is that the puzzle board extends well into the neighboring buildings on each side! nt SeattleVet 9 hrs ago #31
Snort ❤️😺 littlemissmartypants 22 hrs ago #4
That's a good one Picaro 22 hrs ago #5
Hi there DFW! How are you feeling? Great joke! Diamond_Dog 22 hrs ago #6
I am in that most dangerous stage DFW 22 hrs ago #10
Haha those are hilarious! Diamond_Dog 21 hrs ago #15
So glad to see you back! Rhiannon12866 10 hrs ago #28
GOOD one!!! calimary 6 hrs ago #36
I've been to Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch Siwsan 22 hrs ago #9
Agree, Siwsan, being Welsh must be fun and tongue twisting. Polly Hennessey 21 hrs ago #16
I spent a year there druidity33 18 hrs ago #21
Because of my surname, which is VERY common in Wales, everyone I met said I might be a cousin Siwsan 17 hrs ago #22
I did a lot of hitch-hiking around druidity33 14 hrs ago #25
Percentages are slightly down in recent years TommyT139 12 hrs ago #27
So have I! I remember taking a photo of my parents in front of that extremely long sign! Rhiannon12866 10 hrs ago #29
I've heard lots of people pronounce it Siwsan 42 min ago #37
That's actually pretty easy to pronounce..... lastlib 9 hrs ago #34
I heard that as a Texas joke cab67 22 hrs ago #11
That puts us all in a which came first dilemma DFW 21 hrs ago #14
The first Dairy Queen in Texas was 1947 IronLionZion 21 hrs ago #18
Knowing Wales DFW 16 hrs ago #24
1992 in Cardiff IronLionZion 13 hrs ago #26
I heard it as a Texas joke too... momta 21 hrs ago #17
Explore the Jaw-Dropping Charm of Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyllllantysiliogogogoch! IronLionZion 21 hrs ago #19
I heard this as a Wisconsin joke, Oconomowoc fargone 19 hrs ago #20
It's certainly the best Welsh joke I've ever heard, but also the worst, as it's the only one I've ever heard. NNadir 17 hrs ago #23
Not to be outdone by the Welsh, Massachusetts has its own entry: Totally Tunsie 10 hrs ago #30
A version of the same joke in Texas for forty-plus years, I guess. Ilsa 9 hrs ago #32
How to celebrate St. David's Day cyclonefence 9 hrs ago #33
I thought Germans coined long words, Lionel Mandrake 6 hrs ago #35

WestMichRad

(3,478 posts)
1. Woo-hoo! DFW is back!
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 09:48 AM
22 hrs ago

And with a great joke too!

I’m assuming, but it’s good to know you’re feeling okay.

DFW

(60,668 posts)
13. I do feel OK, thanks. But that is the dangerous part
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:33 AM
21 hrs ago

Apparently I am nowhere yet out of the woods, but I don't feel bad, so I'm not noticing what is ailing me. I intend to keep on top of it regardless!

SuzyandPuffpuff

(735 posts)
2. Love it
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 09:55 AM
22 hrs ago

Hahaha...reminds me of the "Taxi" episode with rev Jim ... "what does the yellow light mean?" ..."sloooow down!"

DFW

(60,668 posts)
7. Yeah, but keep in mind, there are tourists to respect, so............
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:10 AM
22 hrs ago

For short, they just call it Whopperllgwyngyllgogerychwyrn.

DFW

(60,668 posts)
12. As you may have surmised by the way their towns are spelled
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:31 AM
21 hrs ago

Vowels are VERY expensive in Wales, and the very first episode of the Welsh version of Wheel of Fortune that started 35 years ago has yet to wrap. One of the contestants, barely out of high school at the beginning, is now a grandparent, and they still haven't gotten to the final round.

SeattleVet

(5,955 posts)
31. Part of the problem is that the puzzle board extends well into the neighboring buildings on each side! nt
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:37 PM
9 hrs ago

DFW

(60,668 posts)
10. I am in that most dangerous stage
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:27 AM
22 hrs ago

I feel fine, and, according to their readouts, I am not fine.

I will keep in close touch, and do what they tell me. You see, I have this really hot girlfriend, even married her some 44 years ago, and I'd really like to stick around with her for a couple of decades more, if possible.

I hear some cool jokes over here. A guy from Poland once told me this one (I have posted it before, fair warning):

A polish guy was walking along the beach on the Baltic near Gdańsk, and found an old oil lamp on the beach. He picked up, and rubbed some of the debris off, when a genie appeared. The genie explained that he had three wishes, and the genie would grant him all of them. He asked anything? and the genie confirmed: anything. OK, said the Polish guy, for my first wish, I wish for the Chinese Army to invade Poland. The genie gulped, but said, OK, I am required to grant you that wish. And for your second wish? The Polish guy said he wanted the Chinese Army to invade Poland again. The genie shook his head, but said, alright, and for your third with? The Polish guy said he wanted the Chinese Army to invade Poland a third time. The genie was not happy with this, but was bound to grant the man's wishes. However, he said he begged the man WHY, as a Pole, he wanted the Chinese army to invade Poland three times in succession? The man answered, "for the Chinese army to invade Poland, on the way they would have to lay waste to all of Russia on the way three times."

Another Pole, back in the Soviet era, told me that if fleas had bio-luminescence, then Moscow would look like Las Vegas.

The Poles are not overly fond of the Russians, as a generalization.

Diamond_Dog

(41,378 posts)
15. Haha those are hilarious!
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:41 AM
21 hrs ago

I am half Polish so I certainly understand 😄

I am certain you’ll be as good as new very soon and can look forward to a couple more decades with your lovely wife!

I am half Polish, and the other half German.

Rhiannon12866

(260,386 posts)
28. So glad to see you back!
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 09:42 PM
10 hrs ago

And my maternal grandmother came from Poland - in 1912 she made the journey as a 15-year-old with only a friend, she was the eldest in her family. And she was born a twin, but her twin died when they were only 7. The part of Poland that she came from was occupied by the Russians and though she was a very kind and generous person, she continued to hate the Russians for the rest of her life.

Siwsan

(27,915 posts)
9. I've been to Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:23 AM
22 hrs ago

I made a special trip to go there. Perhaps I saw visiting Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch as a right of Welsh ancestry passage. Being Welsh is fun.

druidity33

(6,945 posts)
21. I spent a year there
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 01:55 PM
18 hrs ago

as a foreign exchange student. Great people. Difficult language. I did not meet too many people who spoke fluent Welsh. Maybe 3?



Siwsan

(27,915 posts)
22. Because of my surname, which is VERY common in Wales, everyone I met said I might be a cousin
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 02:37 PM
17 hrs ago

I stayed at a B&B, once, and the couple took me to the local British Union for drinks. I was, at the time, active duty military and I felt very welcome'

They also treated me to a full Sunday Roast dinner. It was lovely.

I love the Welsh. And the Scots. I haven't much experience with home grown Irish.

druidity33

(6,945 posts)
25. I did a lot of hitch-hiking around
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 06:09 PM
14 hrs ago

the UK. Always got along with the Welsh and Scottish folk... the English were sometimes a little harder to like. I only did a week in Ireland so didn't really get a sense of the folk there. And though it's totally anecdotal, every single French person i met was a total ass. Though this was the early 90s and i was at the time a dreadlocked backpacking traveler with piercings... and totally "skint"! Sometimes i was not well received.

TommyT139

(2,466 posts)
27. Percentages are slightly down in recent years
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 08:01 PM
12 hrs ago

...but it's still a considerable portion of the populace. I believe there are laws mandating bilingual signs and such. Also, speaking Welsh is a sort of identity choice and perhaps for some, a political signifier -- Plaid Cymru, a left party, seeks local empowerment and independence from Britain.

That makes sense to me -- if I could speak a different language to distinguish myself from the trumpists, besides all the plotting and harmonized hymn-singing, I'd be alllll over that!

For the year ending 30 June 2025, the APS estimated that 27.2% of people aged three years or older were able to speak Welsh. This figure equates to around 836,800 people.

From https://www.gov.wales/welsh-language-data-annual-population-survey-july-2024-june-2025-html

As far as ease and frequency of usage:
Almost half of all Welsh speakers consider themselves fluent, while 20% are able to speak a fair amount. 56% of Welsh speakers speak the language daily, and 19% speak the language weekly.

from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_language

Rhiannon12866

(260,386 posts)
29. So have I! I remember taking a photo of my parents in front of that extremely long sign!
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 09:47 PM
10 hrs ago

And have you ever heard anyone actually pronounce it? At the time I went with my parents and my Dad's mother who I was very close to. Though she was a world traveler, my Dad wanted for her to see Ireland since she'd never been. And I really loved Wales as well.

lastlib

(28,758 posts)
34. That's actually pretty easy to pronounce.....
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 11:00 PM
9 hrs ago

Just fill your mouth with rocks, and say, "Fourscore and seven years ago......"

cab67

(3,875 posts)
11. I heard that as a Texas joke
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:27 AM
22 hrs ago

Tourists were debating how to pronounce the name of the city of Manchaca. (It's "Man-Shack," for the record. Go figure.) They go to a restaurant, ask how the place is pronounced, and the cashier says "Dar-ee-queeeeeeen."

DFW

(60,668 posts)
14. That puts us all in a which came first dilemma
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:36 AM
21 hrs ago

Burger Kings in Wales or Dairy Queens in Texas?

Or maybe someone from Texas visited Wales, and the Welsh modified it for local consumption, although the number of Texans who know where Wales is not what one would call overwhelming.

IronLionZion

(51,651 posts)
18. The first Dairy Queen in Texas was 1947
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:53 AM
21 hrs ago

Well before Burger King was founded in 1953 and entered the UK market in 1973. I couldn't find a year for Wales specifically but it was more recent.

DFW

(60,668 posts)
24. Knowing Wales
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 04:00 PM
16 hrs ago

It was probably 2005, and even then 90% of Wales had not the slightest clue what it was.

IronLionZion

(51,651 posts)
26. 1992 in Cardiff
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 07:13 PM
13 hrs ago

European countries with 0 Burger Kings include Iceland, Serbia, and Ukraine.

Google says there are many Burger Kings in south Wales and very few in the North.

IronLionZion

(51,651 posts)
19. Explore the Jaw-Dropping Charm of Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyllllantysiliogogogoch!
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:57 AM
21 hrs ago


It wasn't the original name. It was created to bring tourists to visit.

NNadir

(38,757 posts)
23. It's certainly the best Welsh joke I've ever heard, but also the worst, as it's the only one I've ever heard.
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 03:25 PM
17 hrs ago

Totally Tunsie

(12,180 posts)
30. Not to be outdone by the Welsh, Massachusetts has its own entry:
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:25 PM
10 hrs ago
The lake with the notoriously long name in Massachusetts is Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg (often spelled with varying numbers of g's) which translates to "You fish on your side, I fish on my side, nobody fishes in the middle". Located in the town of Webster, it is frequently recognized as the longest geographic place name in the United States.

Ilsa

(64,694 posts)
32. A version of the same joke in Texas for forty-plus years, I guess.
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:46 PM
9 hrs ago

Only the town the travelers stopped in was Waxahatchie (pronounced Wocks-a-hach-ee, IIRC), and the server replies in her slow southern, Texas drawl, "Dairrr-eee Queeeennn."

cyclonefence

(5,169 posts)
33. How to celebrate St. David's Day
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:51 PM
9 hrs ago

Get under the table and take a leek.

I don't understand why you should get under the table, but that's the way I heard it.

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