See also: Hamburgher

English edit

Noun edit

hamburgher (countable and uncountable, plural hamburghers)

  1. Dated form of hamburger.
    • 1941, Irene Baird, He Rides the Sky, page 77:
      Needless to say, when I left there and went on to Hallam Joan and I started in to have a time and, just as I foresaw, she has made a swell job of bashing the red car to hamburgher meat []
    • 1947, Maura Laverty, Maura Laverty's cookbook: with a section on diet by Sybil Le Brocquy:
      For variety, wrap each hamburgher in a slice of bacon, fasten with a toothpick, and grill.
    • 1950, Frances Diane Robotti, Whaling and Old Salem:
      There is a tenderloin near the tail, two large pieces of meat on each side of the backbone of 500 to 600 pounds of red meat of a coarse grain which is sweet and good. It can be ground into hamburghers then mixed with salt pork, seasoned, []