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Crossword clues for beefburger

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
beefburger
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Bert had a feeling in his bones that beefburgers might feature.
▪ Cattle that go to produce the basic ingredient of that beefburger.
▪ Freezer: Pack of steaks, beefburgers, fish-fingers, peas, runner beans, ready cooked curry meal, cod.
▪ Ideal served as hot relish with beefburgers or sausages.
▪ Liberated, Ethel frisked with a Jack Russell in a red, spotted scarf and wolfed up a half-eaten beefburger bun.
▪ Sometimes, too, Ruth had eaten in a snack bar, having saved up her pocket money for a beefburger.
▪ While sushi and sake by the Koi pool may never replace burned beefburgers and Black Label, it's a nice thought.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
beefburger

beefburger \beef"burg*er\ n. a fried cake of minced beef served on a bun.

Syn: hamburger.

Wiktionary
beefburger

n. A hamburger.

WordNet
beefburger

n. a fried cake of minced beef served on a bun [syn: hamburger]

Usage examples of "beefburger".

Inside, filling one end and nestling next to joints of lamb and boxes of beefburgers, was a stack of three large gray metal cashboxes, each one closely wrapped in trans-parent plastic sheeting.

So she lived with the sharp smell of frying onions and beefburgers, the nights being lit as bright as day, the packets of chips chucked over her gate, the cans of Special Brew lefton her front windowsill, the local supermarkets bumping up their prices on Saturdays, the Scots boys for whom her bedraggled front garden held eerie allure as a urinal, the spontaneous outbursts of singing, the great endless flow of generally good-natured people.

Later, as the two boys were munching on sizzling hot beefburgers, a plant messenger delivered a can of motion-picture film to Tom.

Winnebago during a lunch break, with Ty not a hundred yards away in the commissary, happy as a clam, polishing off his Robert Conrad beefburger and an iced tea.

It is a pity that he does not feel hungry, for dinner is one which he would normally enjoy - beefburger, chips and peas.

There were packets of sausages, beefburgers, baconburgers, beans and bacon-burgers,, sausage beef and baconburgers and something round and dubious called a steakette.

Inside, filling one end and nestling next to joints of lamb and boxes of beefburgers, was a stack of three large grey metal cash boxes, each one closely wrapped in transparent polythene sheeting.

So many of the small restaurants and coffee shops these days served nothing but American-style convenience food-waved beefburgers, sausages in rolls with gluey cheese sauce, and of course Coca-Cola and fries, the wafer and wine of the Western religion of commerce.