no there is not a country named hamburger.
No, there is no country named Hamburger. Hamburger is actually a type of food, specifically a sandwich made with beef patty served in a bun.
Erm... no
The color orange was named after the fruit, not the country.
The element scandium was named after the country Scandinavia.
Brazil is the country named after a tree, the Brazilwood tree. The country's name is derived from the Portuguese word "pau-brasil," which means Brazilwood.
Georgia is the only state named after a country, being named after King George II of England.
No, there is no country named Genovera. It appears to be a fictional or hypothetical name.
Germany, the hamburger is named after the town in Germany, hamburg.
the frankfurter is called a frankfurter because it comes from a city or state named Frankfurt
Germany
ANSWER: from America
John Hamburger has written: 'Cross-country skiing guide' -- subject(s): Cross-country skiing, Guidebooks
a town in Germany is hamburg which is closely link to the food item hamburger. so the answer is .... hamburger
hamburgers were made in the U.S.A
If you mean hamburger, it was developed in America.
There is a country named Brazil and there is a country named Belize but there is no country or continent named Bezile.
The price does vary from store to store and depending on what country, but a hamburger costs $2.50 in the United States. By the way, a hamburger and a plain hamburger have the same cost even though it's cheaper for McDonald's to make a plain hamburger. Kimberly rocks says everyone
Brazil is the country named after a tree, the Brazilwood tree. The country's name is derived from the Portuguese word "pau-brasil," which means Brazilwood.
The United States is credited for the first actual hamburger on a bun. It was first made in Tulsa in 1891. However, the Library of Congress recognizes the sales by Louis Lassen (1900) as the first. The term "hamburger" for a chopped-meat dish comes from Hamburg in Germany, where a 'hamburg steak' (late 1880s) was originally minced smoked beef. The similar dish 'Salisbury steak' is named for a US physician, Dr. J.H. Salisbury.