hoagie
IPA: hˈoʊgi
noun
- (US, Pennsylvania) A sandwich made on a (usually soft) long Italian roll; a submarine sandwich.
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Examples of "hoagie" in Sentences
- Exploring the world of big, economical sandwiches that had legendary origins - the "hoagie"
- The Sandwich Hunter should do well against Philadelphia - where the term "hoagie" originated.
- His nose was the size of a hoagie bread, his mouth — his lips — those of a donkey's.
- Move from a whole bagel to a bialy or English muffin, from a sub, hoagie, or plain roll to sliced bread.
- While the exact origin of the multimeat Italian sandwich (grinder, hero, sub, et al.) is debatable, it seems the "hoagie" originated in South Philly.
- If you order a sandwich on bread with a doughy inside including bagels, long steak or hoagie rolls, and plain hard or soft rolls, ask to have the inside scooped out before the filling is added.
- A hoagie is a sandwich -- or as Sinatra would have called it, 'a sangwich '-- made with fresh, thinly sliced lunch meats and provolone cheese on an Italian roll, stuffed with pickles, hot peppers and just anything else edible that could be found behind the counter.
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