Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. Check out and contribute to the discussion of this word!

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word leberwurst.

Examples

  • And huge trays of stuff to put on bread, including large tins of potted leberwurst.

    Mungowitz in Deutschland--Day 2 2009

  • So, I make a fat leberwurst sam'ich, with the brown bread.

    Mungowitz in Deutschland--Day 2 2009

  • I thought I´d get tired of leberwurst on brown bread, but not yet.

    Mungowitz in Deutschland--Day 4 2009

  • All good, but the leberwurst stands out as the finest.

    Mungowitz in Deutschland--Day 2 2009

  • I had breakfast (ummmmmm .... leberwurst and prosciutto on hard brown bread), and then rode the big girl's bike to the office.

    Mungowitz in Deutschland--Day 3 2009

  • For the Schlachtfest, Stralsunders gathered in hundreds, the women in their dirndls and men in old-fashioned suits, gobbling pig knuckle, leberwurst, knockwurst, dozens of waxy, greasy boiled potatoes, and of course, blutwurst.

    Blood Lite II: Overbite Kevin J. Anderson 2010

  • Certainly they have everything that is most Germanically oppressive: mist, large women, lager and leberwurst, and a moral atmosphere of the week before last that conveys to the mind the physical sensations of undigested cold sausage.

    Nights in London Thomas Burke 1915

  • Bratwurst, bockwurst and leberwurst were on my family's snack menu from when I was a child.

    WN.com - Articles related to Germany Suffers a Fit of Willfulness 2010

  • A number of German words have become current in general South Australian English (mettwurst, leberwurst or liverwurst, and the ubiquitous fritz, for example, all describing types of sausage), but spelling, especially in words containing - ie -, is often so uncertain that a correspondent in the local newspaper felt obliged to point out that a Wiener Schnitzel has nothing to do with wine and a Liedertafel need not be sorrowful.

    VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol VII No 4 1981

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.