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In German, "hamburger" refers to someone or something from Hamburg, Germany. It is not used to refer to the food item commonly known as a hamburger in English.
Hamburg
a male from Hamburg (city) or just hamburger like the burger
name comes from the English city of hamburg where the hamburger was originated Hamburg IS NOT a city in England - is is a seaport city in Germany.
The word "hamburger" did not originate in France. It is derived from the German city of Hamburg.
'Hamburg' is a city in Germany. In English, one could call a person in or from Hamburg a "Hamburger" (capitalized).
hamburg (hamburger)
A Hamburger.The term "Hamburger" originally derives from the German town of Hamburg, Germany's second largest city, from where many emigrants came to America. In High German, "Burg" means "fortified town", and is a widespread component of city names. "Bürger" describes someone or something coming from that castle or town, respectively (compare London -> Londoner), hence hamburger can be an adjective in German. -Wikipedia
the frankfurter is called a frankfurter because it comes from a city or state named Frankfurt
Hamburger comes from the Chinese, but you could just look in a dictionary Actually, the word Hamburger comes from Germany, It was originally called a "Hamburg steak" because in Germany there was a port called "Hamburg" and the staple of the town was a piece of pounded beef, eventually when it traveled elsewhere it was called a "Hamburger Steak" the adjective Hamburger meaning "Of hamburg" and eventually the laziness of human language dropped off the "steak" part and just left Hamburger.
Hamburgeres come from steers that are raised to be sold for meat.
Hamburg is not a continent, but a city in Germany. Germany is located in the continent of Europe.