How do you call these where you live?

How do you call these where you live?

sandwiches

el sandwicho

Sandwiches.

If they were presented neatly on a platter instead of piled up on a slab then they'd be tea sandwiches.

tramezzini

Boterham.

>white, untoasted bread
Poor people food. Garbage. Trash. 1st grader's lunch.

Voileipä

Tea sandwiches

Witches of the Sand

Another vite for tea sandwiches

kanker
hoer

Sandwiches are "butties" in Northern England also "Sarnnies" in the UK in general.

Sangas.

Hello non-native English speaker.
In English you would say "WHAT do you call these where you live?"

Regards

Either is acceptable, sweetness.

Kill all brits

wrong

housewife babyfood

Nonsense.

>american
>sweetnessposter

Breaddystacks.

Picture

бyтepбpoд

paninis

Don't listen to those dips, they are the type that rejects phrasing simply because they aren't used to it. It does sound better imo

It does not. "how to" implies a set of directions to perform a task: "how to call" is literally asking for instructions on operating a telecommunications device.

>it does not

That is the extent of you argument, since the second part relies on one specific definition of the word "call". I do respect your opinion that it sounds better in the other wording. Your opinion has been noted.

Actual, genuine retards.

if you want to pass as a native english speaker ignore this wise guy

if you don't, do what the fuck you want

>since the second part relies on one specific definition of the word "call"
Yes, the specific definition implied and necessitated by the question "how to" preceding it.
To use the other definition of call, one would need to ask "what", not "how".

Toad in a hole.

ti-sandwich pas d'croute

Yummy triangles

Hou ook van jou.

brit here

tiddly wibbly triagnlydoodoo yum yums

Butties.

>no crust
>white bread
that's just garbage

You mean breaddystack.

Both "how" and "what" are not interchangeable in all situations. It depends on the context, also in regards to what type of answer you expect.
"How do you say where you live?" is correct whereas "How do you say this where you life?" is incomplete, for nobody knows what "this" is. You would have to be pointing to a specific word or follow the sentence up with the specific word you meant. Referring to an object would be incorrect.
"What do you call this where you live?" is incomplete, for nobody knows what "this" is. However, referring to an object here works. You can instead say "What do you a call a sandvich where you live?" if you don't want to refer to something with other means.

"How do you call where you live" is not proper English unless the answer you're expecting is how they initiate communication with . If I remember correctly, the linguistic reason it's wrong has to do with the transitive-ness of the verb you're using in the sentence. It doesn't mean what you think it means, but most people are good enough at reading to mentally correct it to what you should have said because the sentence doesn't make sense if we don't mentally correct it.

Foam whispers, of course. Or Pyramid Parties if you're feeling fancy.

Does that bread glow in the dark?

gówno

That's nice. Except no one said "how to" ITT before you did.
The fact is, using the word 'how' in this manner, though archaic, is not incorrect. Or, at least, so say Archibald Macleish and his successor Robert Fitzpatrick, professors of rhetoric and oratory at Harvard. Look it up.

>dat 'everyone but me is the same poster' paranoia
Ya really ought to get yourself evaluated before that 'noia gets the better of you and you shoot up a farmer's market or something.

lol

>Except no one said "how to" ITT before you did.

Guess you didn't read OP, user....

Re-read the OP and get back to me. It's only eight words, so it shouldn't take you too long. I'll wait.

Based ESL poster

You say eight, yet you're apparently failing at the first two.

We call them sandwiches, just like other normal non autistic people

No ones said finger sandwhiches, maybe because thats an inside term. Anyway, my moms british and swears by cucumber and curry egg salad sandwhiches, but i think people just make these things to look at. Who the fuck eats un toasted bread?

Sandhexen

Das Sandwiches

I thought finger sandwiches were cut straight, into "finger" shapes, rather than being cut on the diagonal.

stacked grain polygons, garnished internally

Those are the ugliest tea sandwiches I've ever seen. Have some damn pride.

Food stuck in between sponge cake bread imitates.

It doesn’t matter if you’re all the same guy and I wasn’t relying on the idea that you were, the fact is that your position is the same and I was commenting on the position.

big braunchos with or without atfgntjaw(pronounced robin)

>Sandwiches are "butties" in Northern England

Butties are only made with buns no?

No

Here's your (You). (^:
I know they sustain you.

háromszögszendvics

Buterbrod? Is the translation just "butter bread"?

Nylonbojtel

Where does the R come from?

finger sandwiches

Smorbrod

Cheese ghosties

sandwiches

Boo!

Firkantsjever

Anal rompers

But they're triangles.

And they're called sangewedges.

tummy ready bready weddys
t. Bong

are there really people here that don't drink soda?!

>cut into wedges
>somehow, no one calls it a sandwedge
Golf be damned, I'd eat the fuck out of a sandwedge.

cookies

I think cucumber sandwiches are just divine, darling.

Deli sweepins (gently used).

kanapki

same as in german "butterbrot". literally butter-bread.

Fluffy meaty puffies.

ding-ling dankers

Queeny's num-num crooked pinky tea tooters.

sammich

Just like John Wayne used to make them

Club Sandwiches.

le sandwich

montagus

They invented it they can call it what they want

Faggots

finla
kolmioleipä (triangle bread)

Sandwiches or Butterbrot

finger sandwiches

small crustless sandwiches

so it's for you, right? yum yum in your tum tum, welfaro.

Mongolen sandwichen

why is the bread so white and missing the crust

also sandwiches

"party" or "tea" sandwices

in germany its ساندویچ

sandos