Sentence examples for cheeseburger from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(2)

'cheeseburger' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it in any informal context to describe a hamburger topped with cheese. Example sentence: I'm starving, let's go get a cheeseburger.

Dictionary

cheeseburger

noun

A hamburger sandwich containing cheese (usually one or more slices of processed cheese).

  • Brad was so fat he was a cheeseburger away from exploding

Exact(60)

Its signature cheeseburger, the "cheeseburg", contains a beef patty blended with grains, tofu and a beef-and-seaweed garum.

I'm going to live for ever... you know, so long as the cattle in the cheeseburger was reared humanely and everyone involved in its production was paid a decent living wage, which I doubt.

Did you see that photo of Christoph Waltz eating a cheeseburger at the Golden Globes this week?

Bill Clinton was set to enter the White House, the European Union was born and China had its first taste of a double cheeseburger with fries when McDonalds opened its doors in Beijing.

ON SEPTEMBER 21st Lawrence Russell Brewer ordered up a feast: two chicken-fried steaks smothered in gravy, a supersized cheeseburger, an omelette, fried okra, fajitas, a pizza, a pound of barbecue, half a loaf of bread, and, for pudding, ice cream and fudge with peanuts on top.But when it arrived, he decided not to eat any of it.

SAY I want to buy a cheeseburger, coke and fries from you.

You give me the cheeseburger, coke and fries and say, okay, that'll be $4 please.

McDonald's is charging more for its popular double cheeseburger (which normally costs $1) in some American restaurants than others, to gauge customers' tolerance of a permanent price rise that would help offset the higher cost of ingredients.

A TYPICAL English football fan, a reader of Bill Buford's "Among the Thugs" might assume, is a tattooed yobbo with a "fat, flat bulldog face" and a T-shirt bedribbled with cheeseburger grease and cheap vodka.

But in response 26 American states adopted "Commonsense Consumption Acts", commonly known as "cheeseburger bills", to protect fast-food firms from such lawsuits.

In the cheeseburger analogy, I might propose to you that if you only want to pay $3, you can cut out the coke, or you can cut out the fries.

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