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Inspired by Avi's Vowelburger™ Riddle
Yesterday, Vowelburgers™ announced their first ever Penta-decker Vowelburger™. They have made some simplifications to their manufacturing process and have created a new burger for today. A Penta-decker Vowelburger™ means six consonant buns sandwiching five vowel patties as shown:

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Here is the menu's description of the new burger:

Layer Vowelburger™
1 remove
2 money
3 god
4 rose
5 No.26

Can you identify what type this burger is from the description on the menu?

Notes:

  • The full name of this burger contains layers 1-5 from left to right.

  • Eating the Penta-decker Vowelburger™ is like eating 5 regular* Vowelburgers™ merged with each other; in other words, the top of the first layer is the bottom of the next.

  • There are no longer any add-ons in the burgers (not even discarded ones). Every layer is a regular Vowelburger™ on its own.

* The word "regular" here means a bottom bun, single patty, and a top bun.

We hope you all will enjoy our new burger!

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2 Answers 2

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I think the answer may be

POPULARIZED

remove

POP

money

PUL, currency in Afghanistan and historically in parts of Russia.

god

LAR, ancient Roman deity.

rose

RIZ, dialect word for rose.

No.26

ZED, the 26th letter of the alphabet.

This might fit with the first Penta-decker Vowelburger, since

something that is popularised is often said to go VIRAL. (Perhaps a bad word to use these days ...)

A pedantic note:

there seems to be an inconsistency here in which type of English is being used. American English spells the word as POPULARIZED but calls the letter ZEE; British English calls the letter ZED but spells the word as POPULARISED. It's possible there's another dialect (Canadian English) that used POPULARIZED and ZED, though.

Feedback section: this one was relatively quick and easy to solve, mostly because of the final clue. The number 26 is naturally going to bring one thing to mind, and (assuming we're OK with the pedantic note above) there are lots of longer words ending with those three letters. Then it's possible to work backwards: there aren't many 3-letter words ending with Z, and then there's a short finite list of 11-letter words ending with a specific five letters. The clued words are mostly quite obscure, but given the last one it's still doable.

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  • $\begingroup$ Great job, that's the one I was looking for. As an American, I didn't think about the possibility of the answer having an alternate spelling (although it does make sense given similar words which have alternate spellings). The word rot13(MRQ), however, although not used here is something I was aware of. $\endgroup$ Commented Mar 18, 2020 at 15:28
  • $\begingroup$ You can use -ize in British English too; the Oxford University Press prefers that form to -ise. [EDITED to add:] On etymological grounds. As it happens, I agree with them. $\endgroup$
    – Gareth McCaughan
    Commented Mar 18, 2020 at 15:34
  • $\begingroup$ As per your past feedback, I attempted to put some hints in the flavor text. In this case, I added synonyms of the answer ("simplifications" and "you all will enjoy"). Didn't think adding hints about the process would be necessary here since it's not too different from last time. $\endgroup$ Commented Mar 18, 2020 at 15:35
  • $\begingroup$ @GarethMcCaughan I wondered if you'd be along to mention that ;-) It's still true that BrE largely although not universally goes for -ise. And funnily enough the OP here is an American user of -ize and zed! $\endgroup$ Commented Mar 18, 2020 at 15:36
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    $\begingroup$ @eyl327 Yep, this time I understood the structure/process just from reading the question, without needing any additional hints. Didn't spot the subtle clues to the answer itself, but that's a really nice touch. $\endgroup$ Commented Mar 18, 2020 at 15:37
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Could the burger perhaps be

REMOBILIZED

In that

remove - "REM" being its first three letters;
money - is lusted after by the mafia/"MOB";
god - "BIL" is apparently the goddess of the waning moon in Norse mythology;
rose - "LIZ" Rose is a famous musician (I find this to be a stretch in my answer);
no 26 - "ZED" is the British pronunciation of the letter Z, the 26th letter in the English alphabet

If so, perhaps the world needs to be this second Penta-decker Vowelburger™ as prudent recourse to the first one.

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