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fast-food

a. Of, pertaining to, or serving fast food

Usage examples of "fast-food".

Kreiss was sitting in the parking lot of a fast-food joint three blocks from the Beltway interchange with U.

The fast-food joint became a landmark when the pony ride that had occupied the corner of La Cienega and Beverly for decades was replaced by the neon-and-concrete assault known as the Beverly Center.

Ingram also introduced innovations in the use of print advertising and couponing during this era, establishing a marketing norm for the fast-food and other industries.

Most college students in the 1930s were exposed to fast-food hamburgers, whether from White Castle or a competitor, and unconsciously accepted burgers as a part of their regular diet.

Americans spend many billions of dollars every year buying these burgers, fueling the growth of the fast-food industry and making it a major component of their modern economy.

In 1994, fast-food restaurants in the United States served more than five billion burgers, increasing their total sold by almost 3 percent from the previous year.

Just as tacos, fish fillets, and eggrolls offered a break from fast-food monotony, this new generation of diverse hamburgers also gave customers significant choices for their meals.

White Castle and the formative years for fast-food hamburgers exist only as footnotes in scholarly works either praising or criticizing Ray Kroc and his golden arches.

It also supplied America with a distinctive ethnic symbol: people the world over now readily identify fast-food hamburgers as the food of Americans.

Whereas in 1920, fast food as we know it today did not exist, by 1930, fast-food restaurants already dotted urban neighborhoods and highways across America, selling millions of hamburgers annually.

Americans soon began craving White Castle-style fast-food hamburgers, and by the end of the decade they were a staple of the American diet.

This almost immediate proliferation of White Castle imitators was the beginning of the massive fast-food industry, which today ranks among the largest segments of the American economy.

Checking the street signs, he took a few turns until reaching a residential section, brightly painted pink apartment houses, interspaced fast-food restaurants and strip malls.

There were shopping malls and fast-food places and stores that sold cutesy crap.

Contrary to popular belief, however, the hamburger trade in the 1950s was not really dominated by the giant fast-food chains that proliferated in the latter part of the decade.