My favorite: PLAN AHE, with decal letters AD stuck on the back of the car next to the edge of the license plate.
I don’t get this one.
:o
Loooks kinda like “accelerate” to me.
Ask your Sunday school teacher. Or your rabbi.
Or someone else’s.
My favorite is still :
ML8 ML8
I was behind this one at a stoplight, which fortunately gave me time to figure it out – “I’m Late! I’m Late!”
It was only after I did so that I noticed it was on a white Rabbit
(!)
This car had New Hampshire plates. Someone on this board has reported the same license plate numbers, also on a white Rabbit, from another state.
Someone has also reported the plate
INLE
on a black Rabbit. (If you don’t get it, read Richard Adams’ book Watership Down.)
Re: MOMBAG
Some possiblilities
MOM Be Attorney General (someone whose mom is the state attorney general)
MOM Bound And Gagged (Mom is in the trunk and she ain’t getting out)
MOMBA G (someone whose initial is G who likes Momba)
MOM BAG (being a mom is her “bag” man.)
this one could be amusing…
3m ta3
I laughed for like two minutes at MOMBAG. I don’t know what it’s supposed to mean, but it cracked me up.
Weirdest plate I ever saw: XIIX. WTF? It’s not Roman numerals, at least standard Roman numerals.
I thought it was accelerate till you said that. That’s quite an amusing plate.
For those who are still confused (if you want to puzzle it out, don’t highlight the box below):
[SPOILER]Ecclesiastes, chapter 12, verse 8, in the Old Testament of the Bible – “Vanity of vanities, saith the preacher; all is vanity.”
Because it’s a vanity plate, after all…[/SPOILER]
I’m afraid that MOMBAG might be a racial pejorative, based upon an old joke about garbage collectors that I do not care to repeat here. Suffice it to say that it is a racist version of a black man saying, “Come on back”.
But only if it were on the front of the car, where it could be seen in the rear-view mirror.
My guess: The owner wanted to memorialize the events of September 11, 2001. IXXI (IX=9, XI=11) was already taken, so the motorist reversed the order to “11/9”, in the European fashion of day preceding month.