See also: Sandwichs

English edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

sandwichs

  1. Misspelling of sandwiches.
    • 1894, Boot and Shoe Recorder, page 27:
      At the station a fifteen-year-old boy seated behind a lunch counter told me he could furnish me with ham sandwichs, cake, and ice cream. [] I did not like the complexion of his cakes, and his sandwichs had about them a venerable air.
    • 2007, Sally Hammond, Pardon My French: From Paris to the Pyrenees and Back, New Holland Publishers (AU), →ISBN:
      From this distance the village looks even more impressive, with the château (once the feudal home of Monaco’s Grimaldi family) clearly visible, overseeing it all. Here we eat the sandwichs bought in the town [] .
      Like the French we don’t bother with butter on our sandwichs.
    • 2009 July 19, Doug Van Gorder, Hitchhiking Across America: A Ghostly Unedited True Story Of One Man's Pioneered Existence Traversing the Country from Coast to Coast !!!, Outskirts Press, →ISBN, page 349:
      The sandwichs were good too. I'm not really a bologna eater but this was delicious in a unique way but the nagain it had help from some good old American yellow cheese. [] We’ll [sic] I don’t want to bore you with my dinner but I had two full size sandwichs and one little Debbie snack [] .
    • 2011 November 14, Gene Tunlaw, Plight of the Double B Ranch: A Tale of Fiction of the Old West in the Great Territory of Idaho, Xlibris Corporation, →ISBN:
       [] You had better grab something to eat before you leave and take some sandwichs with you [] .” [] He bent down and kissed her on the cheek and just nodded and then went to the cook shack to retrieve Jeb and make the sandwichs.

French edit

Alternative forms edit

Noun edit

sandwichs m

  1. (post-1990) plural of sandwich