Sentences with phrase «labelled as anything»

I don't want to be labelled as anything.
BLW was probably around a million years ago when my other two were babies (but wasn't labelled as anything, or anything to get on your high horse about!).
Dr Daoudy points out that the advantage of this type of opposition is that it can be labeled as anything, but the disadvantage is the lack of leadership and the inherent divisions within the opposition movement.
You don't have to tell some stranger about your issues, won't be labeled as anything, and aren't called upon to «share with the group.»

Not exact matches

While tech companies dislike paying taxes — just look at Apple, which keeps much of its money offshore to avoid taxes, or Twitter, which once threatened to leave San Francisco unless it received a special tax break — none of them wants to be labeled as an opponent of anything that would provide help for the homeless and those with low incomes.
«Anything that provides users with more information is a good thing,» Jillian York, EFF's director for international freedom of expression, tells Inc. of Facebook's move to label stories as disputed and link to a corresponding article explaining why.
For example, if a hospital recruiter is looking for a nurse, searching for one may turn into a major headache, as there currently approximately 560 nurse labelsanything from chief nursing officer to occupational health nurse practitioner — and no algorithm that could quickly and accurately identify a nurse.
It also encouraged participants subconsciously to be more drawn to new things than anything labelled as «classic.»
I consider anything within 10 % of fair value to be fairly valued, so I would label the current price as Fair.
It is evil if ever anything could be labeled as such.
«churches like that», being predicated upon the fraudulent activity as they seem to be, could be «banned» but that would not really change much of anything... other than repackaging the criminal activity under a loosely - defined label... meh.
As with anything, it's better to ask someone what they believe or do not believer instead of relying on a label.
What one culture assigns labels that we translate as «good» and «bad» is pretty obviously something assigned by the culture so we aren't saying anything anyone disagrees with.
«Congress has only faced votes a few times on the complex legal and moral questions of whether heinous crimes qualify as genocide — and division is deep about what, if anything, the label mandates the U.S. government to do.»
I thought about how I was giving up what I labeled as «quick fixes,» meaning anything that I turned to instead of Jesus which ranged from numbing myself with Netflix binges to eating a pint of Ben & Jerry's after a bad day.
I think it is absurd how Christians label their views as the truth when its very easy to prove their beliefs are anything but the truth.
But it is also understandable that anything which is not «moving with the times» tends to be labelled as «old - fashioned» and «outmoded».
Valerie, as soon as you label and generalize someone, your ignorance talks over anything else you were trying to say.
«Nobody need suppose that the razing of Catholic churches in Krajina from 1991 to 1995 had anything whatsoever to do with a disagreement over the filioque clause in the Creed or something labeled by Richard Dawkins as religious «certainty.
When a person exhibits too much passion over anything — God, a political movement, the latest in tattoos or a popular television show — we label that person as obsessive or compulsive, and mutter, «Get a life» Might we better understand zeal as Isaiah does, as the prerogative of God, who, despite the mess we've made of things, still chooses to care for this battered creation and our faulty selves?
You label anything you don't agree with as liberal without even thinking.
Personally, I don't see anything wrong with it — diet is a highly personal choice, and the «wellness» labels we've created for ourselves can often do more harm than good, as in this case.
In a world of natural products I try to gravitate away from anything with natural flavors as that can mean a variety of things and I like ingredient labels to be as transparent as possible.
The FDA, in order not to create «confusion» in people who see the word coconut to mean it is actually is a tree nut, decided to rule that anything containing coconuts be labeled as a «tree - nut».
Through long experience, I have learned not to label anything as «vegan ``.
Anything labeled as wonton wrappers, potsticker wrappers, gyoza wrappers, etc. should all work.
I wasn't planning on labeling them gluten - free or anything like that - they would need to stand up on there own as delicious first, and the fact that they happened to be gluten - free would be a footnote.
AFI said is a natural, E-number free product that in most cases will not require companies to add anything to their labels as the ingredients in the glaze are typically already part of the formulation.
Further, it's gotten to the point where any comment made in support of an argument made by the right is labeled racist, etc., as if someone in a political position one doesn't share can never be right about anything (a problem shared by both those on the left and right).
This conclusion then leads to an even deeper implication: It doesn't really matter if we label these qualities grit or self - control or tenacity or perseverance, or whether we define them as character strengths or noncognitive skills — or anything else, for that matter.
When labels are applied to anything as complex as all of the choices and love and anguish that go into being a parent, that role is immediately trivialized and for some frightening reason parenting is converting into following a set of rules (or «principles») rather than living in the moment, responding to your child and doing the best you can with what you've got.
If you have someone in your home with a food allergy, you can dedicate one lid to that person... and label it as such - so if my sister takes the kids for a picnic, she'll know that the orange lid is for her kid and will be 100 % safe for her, and that the green is my little guy's, and he can eat anything in that without concern.
And all hell breaks loose as we scramble to find something — anything — in this house that a.) has not been shared previously by either child, b.) is not stooooo - pid, and c.) will not label them as freaks for the rest of their school career.
This includes sugary foods such as baked goods, white breads, processed foods like crackers and cookies, fruit juices, candy, and most anything you can read in the labels that has enriched flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup, or anything listed with a «- tose» at the end of it.
Food labels (calories, added sugars): As the Washington Post puts it, the food industry is counting on the current administration to back off on anything that might help us all make better food choices.
That said it can be anything, everything or nothing; labeling something as an enduring neoconservative position is always going to be problematic.
«Liberal» and «Conservative» as applied to US politics are just labels, they don't mean anything, the same way Democrats and Republicans don't have any relation to supporting more democracy over representation or vice versa.
Yet, if past orders are anything to go by, it is doubtful if the herdsmen can be stopped, especially as the IG himself has already labelled what is happening as communal crisis.
Stick with eating whole foods (i.e., anything WITHOUT a nutrition label) and you can eat as much as you want (almost).
Anything outside of this reference range is typically labeled as «high» or «low» in bold font.
Be on the lookout during this challenge for: dextrose, maltodextrin, sucrose, fructose, cane sugar, evaporated cane juice, acesulfame potassium (sold as Sweet One — often combined with aspartame or sucralose to sweeten gum, diet soda and other sweet products), aspartame (Nutri - sweet and equal), saccharin (sold as Sweet n» Low), stevia (combined with sugar alcohol and sold under brand names like Truvia and Pure Via), erythritol (a sugar alcohol derivative of corn) xylitol, brown rice syrup (and other syrups), high fructose corn syrup (made by treating starch extracted from corn with enzymes to make fructose and glucose)-- and if there's anything on a food label that you think might be sugar, google it.
The FDA says that anything with less than 20 parts per million (ppm) of gluten can be labeled as gluten - free, as it won't be dangerous for those with gluten sensitivity.
Anything with more needs to be labeled as «gluten - reduced» or «gluten - removed.»
Sugar is often not in plain sight on labels and will masquerade under alternate names such as agave, corn syrup, malt syrup, invert sugar, fruit juice concentrates, dextrose; anything with the ending «- ose,» and more.
If they have no job to do and see they won't be used for anything, they basically say «the hell with this» and walk through the door labeled «Fat Storage» where they will then be stored on your body as fat.
Now this is not to say that you can't ever eat anything labeled as «gluten free,» but just make sure that you read the labels very carefully to ensure you are eating the most high quality food possible.
Avoid anything labeled as «low - fat» or «fat - free», as it usually has artificial additives and extra carbs.
«Many athletes have labeled this thought process as being «in the zone» — meaning they can't miss a shot, don't hear the crowd or get distracted by anything outside that moment.»
This will strip it, condition it, and help remove chemicals Just make sure that anything you use is organic labeled and labeled non-GMO as well as vegan.
Unless this eventually changes, it would kinda hard to refer to them as anything else than what is in fact indicated on the label.
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