Western burger franchise : Top ten franchises in the united states : Wine store franchise.
Western Burger Franchise
a statutory right or privilege granted to a person or group by a government (especially the rights of citizenship and the right to vote)
An authorization granted by a government or company to an individual or group enabling them to carry out specified commercial activities, e.g., providing a broadcasting service or acting as an agent for a company's products
A business or service given such authorization to operate
An authorization given by a league to own a sports team
an authorization to sell a company's goods or services in a particular place
grant a franchise to
Living in or originating from the west, in particular Europe or the U.S
relating to or characteristic of the western parts of the world or the West as opposed to the eastern or oriental parts; "the Western world"; "Western thought"; "Western thought"
a sandwich made from a western omelet
(of a wind) Blowing from the west
Situated in the west, or directed toward or facing the west
a film about life in the western United States during the period of exploration and development
A particular variation of a hamburger with additional or substitute ingredients
United States jurist appointed chief justice of the United States Supreme Court by Richard Nixon (1907-1995)
hamburger: a sandwich consisting of a fried cake of minced beef served on a bun, often with other ingredients
Bürger may refer to: * Ernst Moritz Buerger, founder, Missouri Synod of the Lutheran Church * Gottfried August Bürger, German poet * Heinrich Bürger, German physicist and biologist * Karl-Heinz Bürger, German SS-Oberführer * Martin Julian Buerger (1903-1986), American scientist
* Rudolf Bürger,
French Fries with Animal Style. In' N Out
In-N-Out, is a privately owned fast-food chain restaurant, located in the Western United States. Founded in Southern California in 1948 by Harry Snyder and his wife Esther Snyder, and headquartered in Irvine, CA, In-N-Out Burger has since expanded to the rest of the state, and to Arizona, Nevada, and southern Utah as well.[2] In-N-Out has never franchised, and plans to remain privately owned.[3]
The interior of the Famous Players Coliseum cinema in western Ottawa.
It's more or less identical to the Famous Players Colisée in the Montreal suburb of Kirkland, though the Kirkland one doesn't have the KFC/Taco Bell, or at least it didn't when I lived in Quebec.