From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbeefburgerbeef‧bur‧ger /ˈbiːfbɜːɡə $ -bɜːrɡər/ noun [countable] British English DFa hamburger
Examples from the Corpus
beefburger• Sometimes, too, Ruth had eaten in a snack bar, having saved up her pocket money for a beefburger.• While sushi and sake by the Koi pool may never replace burned beefburgers and Black Label, it's a nice thought.• Liberated, Ethel frisked with a Jack Russell in a red, spotted scarf and wolfed up a half-eaten beefburger bun.• Freezer: Pack of steaks, beefburgers, fish-fingers, peas, runner beans, ready cooked curry meal, cod.• Bert had a feeling in his bones that beefburgers might feature.• Cattle that go to produce the basic ingredient of that beefburger.• Ideal served as hot relish with beefburgers or sausages.