Turn out sandwich can be a noun or a verb. Burger is a filling sandwiched between burger bun. Do respect the language of other region used to describe thing.
“fried chicken sandwich” outside America vs “chicken burger” seems to depend on whether you use a burger bun or not, at least that’s my observation. The secondary observation is that for dietary reasons a lot of places don’t primarily think of burgers as exclusively beef or pork so the swap/substitution is already well underway for what makes a burger patty/filling.
(ETA: so by the time our English settled on understanding a burger is a sandwich using burger buns, then just about anything in the middle can sub for a meat patty)
In the United States, the sandwich usually consists of a chicken filet or patty, toppings and bread. The chicken meat can be deep fried, grilled, roasted or boiled, served hot or cold, and white or dark meat chicken can be used.
and @cendawanita@cendawanita@monyet.cc already explained it you by way of a screenshot from another source from Wikipedia.
it’s quite funny because you defeated yourself with your own logic, and when pointed to various sources you rather ignore them but choose to downvote every single comment that do not agree with you. It still won’t change a damn thing that it’s called a Chicken Burger outside of NA
On what planet is a fried chicken sandwich a burger?
Spotted the American.
it’s called chicken burger outside of North America lol
So just any sandwich is a burger?
Sandwich is made with sliced bread. Burger is made with burger bun.
Removed by mod
Turn out sandwich can be a noun or a verb. Burger is a filling sandwiched between burger bun. Do respect the language of other region used to describe thing.
So just any burger is a sandwich?
All burgers are sandwiches. Not all sandwiches are burgers.
Hope this helps https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburger
Now double check on which instance did this thread originate.
“fried chicken sandwich” outside America vs “chicken burger” seems to depend on whether you use a burger bun or not, at least that’s my observation. The secondary observation is that for dietary reasons a lot of places don’t primarily think of burgers as exclusively beef or pork so the swap/substitution is already well underway for what makes a burger patty/filling.
(ETA: so by the time our English settled on understanding a burger is a sandwich using burger buns, then just about anything in the middle can sub for a meat patty)
(Also, you have to go out more.)
my guy is downvoting ever single person also HAHAHHAHAA
Is he really?? Wow, takde kerja cari kerja behaviour
Yeap, cause I replied to him at various times and they all had a downvote after he replied.
Most of it that’s not in North America, as it turns out. It’s more of a form-factor/method thing than being about beef burgers.
The defining characteristics of a burger are a patty and a bun.
yes, chicken patty, and a bun. Hence, Chicken Burger
That’s not a patty, though. It’s a piece of fried chicken.
it’s a piece of Fried Chicken Patty. Understood?
BUN + FRIED CHICKEN PATTY+ BUN = CHICKEN BURGER
what’s so hard to understand my guy, it’s not even rocket science.
A patty is made of minced food, typically meat. A piece of whole fried chicken is not a patty. What’s so hard to understand about that?
straight from Wikipedia:
and @cendawanita@cendawanita@monyet.cc already explained it you by way of a screenshot from another source from Wikipedia.
it’s quite funny because you defeated yourself with your own logic, and when pointed to various sources you rather ignore them but choose to downvote every single comment that do not agree with you. It still won’t change a damn thing that it’s called a Chicken Burger outside of NA
Look, I can’t help it if other people misname things.
In Malaysia, because language is a funni thing 🤷