Gourmet Lite Dietz & Watson hotdogs are only one point (old points) and they are DELICIOUS. Taste just like a 'regular' hot dog...
Wiener Blut, /Wiener Blut! /Eig'ner Saft, /Voller Kraft, /Voller Glut. /Wiener Blut, /selt'nes Gut, /Du erhebst, /Du belebst /Unser'n Mut!Wiener Blut, /Wiener Blut! /Was die Stadt /Schönes hat, /In dir ruht! /Wiener Blut, /Heiße Flut! /Allerort /Gilt das Wort: /Wiener Blut!
Richard Trentlage, a Chicago ad man, won a contest held by the advertising firm J. Walter Thompson for Oscar Meyer Wiener with a tune called "The Wiener Song."
wiener
Krista sucked jons wiener
Gourmet Lite Dietz & Watson hotdogs are only one point (old points) and they are DELICIOUS. Taste just like a 'regular' hot dog...
A wiener is the name for a frankfurter or similar type of sausage.
A wiener is meat. It is a frankfurter.
A wiener is a frankfurter or similar sausage. You would look in the meat section of any grocery store. You could also find it in a deli.
A frank B frankfurter C wiener D wienerwurst E weenie F sausage are all names for hot dog.
A wiener is another word for a frankfurter. It is similar to a sausage and originally comes from Germany. They are made from minced and seasoned beef or pork. They are stuffed into a casing and then fried or boiled. Sometimes wiener is also used as a term for the common hot dog.
The right weight for a wiener dog should be about 15-18 pounds for the big ones. Miniature Dachshunds should be about 9-12 pounds.
Synonyms for the compound noun 'hot dog' are frank, frankfurter, or wiener. There are also a number of other, regional terms for hot dog.
1. spelling: 'Wiener", NEVER "WEINER", named after the city of Vienna - i.e. Wien 2.Orginally, a frankfurter was a mildly smoked hot dog, shrivelled before boiling it in water 3. In contrast, a wiener was pretty much what we call a hot dog today
The hot dog has been called a frankfurter, suggesting an origin from Frankfurt, Germany. It has also been called wiener, suggesting an origin connected with Vienna, Austria, which is called Wien in German.
There are many common German words known to non-native speakers of that language. Some of the most common include hamburger, frankfurter, delicatessen, lager, strudel and wiener.
The original version of the chopped patty was served in HAMBURG. Similarly, finely ground sausage made in Vienna (Wien) became the WIENER, although the Austrians prefer the term FRANKFURTER (from Frankfurt).