A sandwich would only be protected by copyright if it were literally a work of art. You may trademark a sandwich (the Filet o' Fish, for example, is a registered trademark), but this can be expensive. There are also a few sandwich patents, such as the "sealed crustless sandwich" known as Uncrustables.
The Kent town that sounds like something you'd eat is Sandwich. Located in the southeastern part of England, Sandwich is known for its historical significance and picturesque scenery. The name has also become synonymous with the popular food item, the sandwich, which was named after the 4th Earl of Sandwich in the 18th century.
sandwich
It means something like 'the heart of the matter,' or the truth of the matter.
Nothing! I am like that. I eat like one sandwich at a lunch time and then I'm good for the whole day. Sometimes I eat something at night too but I could do with just that 1 sandwich.
this is a sandwich, that is a slice of something between two slices of bread.
No, copying and pasting is copyright though.
Most likely, the sub part of submarine means a sub (long thin sandwich, like a hot dog bun but longer) and the marine part means something like fish or seafood.
a grilled cheese sandwich with potato chips and a soda. and then have an ice cream sandwich Definatly Food. Because if you ate something like gasoline or explosives, dude, you're dead.
"It means 'you all like the sandwich' in English."
a half of a sandwich
Yes.
on it's own It's between 99p and £1.50 something like that, but the meal is more expensive