noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
eat
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You could eat all the free hamburgers you wanted, but they all were Jack in the Box hamburgers.
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I spot some North Beach denizens eating hamburgers and a lawyer friend from Berkeley picking up romaine leaves with her fingers.
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It never occurred to me that I might want to sit down and eat a hamburger there.
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People who ate hamburgers and steak in the period may be harboring the seeds of a latent and slow-developing brain infection.
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In 1993 more than 500 people fell ill and four died after eating hamburgers from the Jack-in-the-Box fast food chain.
make
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Ranchers are tearing down the rainforests to make hamburgers .
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The lower three grades are seldom sold as retail cuts but are used instead in making hamburger and meat food products.
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White, a big, light-skinned black woman who made memorable hamburgers , chicken and ice cream.
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Grinding beef to make hamburger is a means of tenderizing less tender cuts.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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Could you pick up a pound of hamburger on your way home?
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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In addition to this the shift from Wimpy to Burger King has altered the technology used in production of the hamburgers.
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Of course, these hamburgers will be sold alongside Happy Meals in restaurants that include indoor kiddie playgrounds.
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Perhaps you can also sling a hamburger , skimming it like a Frisbee from pan to plate.
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Peter may be forced to settle for a lifetime of french fries, hamburgers, and humiliation.
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The popular image is that they are mostly teen-agers in relatively high-income families working in hamburger joints for joy money.
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The Romans had hamburgers, you know.
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You could eat all the free hamburgers you wanted, but they all were Jack in the Box hamburgers.