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by locallost 1232 days ago
It's just an urban legend. Most people don't speak German so you can tell them anything you want :-).

Speaking of which, good thing Kennedy never visited Hamburg.

3 comments

Well, you're in luck, he did visit Frankfurt.
And Wien... (Vienna)
Oh, if he’d only made it to Denmark, it’d be deliciously confusing.
I suppose that raises the question, if people from Berlin do indeed call themselves Berliners - do people from Hamburg call themselves Hamburgers? (genuine question)
Yes.

Compare "Danish" as an American term for a Viennese pastry, "he's Danish" doesn't sound odd.

We don't generally abbreviate foods named after places, but:

"Cheddar is 200 miles from both Sandwich and Stilton."

These are all places in England.

I don't see why not. Hamburger means "of Hamburg". If you're thinking about the food item, it isn't a funny coincidence or anything, its name is derived from Hamburg.

I'm not German nor a linguist, YMMV.

Yes. Hence also the names Frankfurter and Wiener (Wien is Vienna, in German).
Or Frankfurt!