How to Use aspartame in a Sentence

aspartame

noun
  • And there is eight times as much of it in milk as in aspartame.
    Kat Eschner, Smithsonian, 27 Jan. 2017
  • What didn’t come from the FDA was the mid-90s aspartame panic.
    Kat Eschner, Smithsonian, 27 Jan. 2017
  • What didn’t come from the FDA was the mid-90s aspartame panic.
    Kat Eschner, Smithsonian, 27 Jan. 2017
  • But Tab drinkers protested the change to the drink’s flavor profile, and the company dropped aspartame from the recipe.
    Jeffrey Miller, The Conversation, 23 Nov. 2020
  • Enough shoppers balked at the new recipe that Pepsi brought the aspartame version back the following year.
    Danielle Wiener-Bronner, CNN, 6 Aug. 2021
  • This is also the first time the IARC has evaluated aspartame.
    Nicole Wetsman, ABC News, 13 July 2023
  • Both drinks are sweetened with aspartame, but the new recipe will move closer to the original taste of Coca-Cola.
    Emily Bamforth, cleveland.com, 26 July 2017
  • Until those studies are done, Azad stressed that people should take these early results with a grain of aspartame.
    Cleve R. Wootson Jr., chicagotribune.com, 18 July 2017
  • So changing our diet to include low-calorie sweeteners, such as sucralose and aspartame, should be a good way to get all the sweet taste without any of the guilt.
    Havovi Chichger, Smithsonian, 21 Mar. 2018
  • In the United States and Canada, both the old and new versions use the same ingredients, aspartame and acesulfame K, to sweeten the product.
    Danielle Wiener-Bronner, CNN, 13 July 2021
  • Chocolate, aged cheeses, salty foods, and food additives like aspartame and MSG are among the ones migraineurs mention most often.
    Colleen Stinchcombe, Health.com, 18 Jan. 2022
  • What that means is no sugar, no aspartame, no preservatives, no high fructose corn syrup.
    Essence, 1 June 2021
  • Now the space next to the cafeteria has been repurposed as a round-the-clock N95 fit-testing station, thrumming with staff members getting sprayed with aspartame.
    Danielle Ofri, The New Yorker, 1 Oct. 2020
  • The aspartame hoax grew with it, as people tried to navigate this new technology.
    Kat Eschner, Smithsonian, 27 Jan. 2017
  • High consumers of aspartame registered with a 15 percent greater chance of cancer.
    Joshua Hawkins, BGR, 28 Mar. 2022
  • Research clearly shows people are wary of aspartame as a sweetener.
    Beth Kowitt, Fortune, 21 Sep. 2017
  • As the story goes, James Schlatter synthesized aspartame in a lab in 1965 while researching anti-ulcer drugs.
    Sam Stone, Bon Appétit, 18 July 2023
  • The standard Celsius essential energy drink has only 10 calories and is free from high fructose corn syrup and aspartame.
    Stefani Sassos, Ms, Rdn, Cso, Cdn, Nasm-Cpt, Good Housekeeping, 10 June 2022
  • Both are sweetened with aspartame and acesulfame K, though Zero Sugar is formulated to taste more like the original Coke.
    Austen Hufford, WSJ, 25 Oct. 2017
  • Just steer clear of artificial sweeteners like aspartame, which are worse than just eating sugar.
    Dave Asprey, PEOPLE.com, 26 Nov. 2019
  • Acevedo, however, says that Ace-K and aspartame are blended together very differently in the two brands.
    Beth Kowitt, Fortune, 10 Jan. 2018
  • The sweetener was discovered in the 1960s and is often paired with aspartame, especially in diet sodas.
    Beth Kowitt, Fortune, 10 Jan. 2018
  • Cane sugar, honey, maple syrup, agave nectar, Splenda, aspartame, saccharin, and corn syrup.
    Zee Krstic, Good Housekeeping, 23 June 2020
  • While the body can handle small amounts of it, usually found in fruits and vegetables and diet sodas containing aspartame, larger amounts can be dangerous to ingest.
    Asia Ewart, refinery29.com, 22 June 2020
  • The committee also did not find evidence linking aspartame to other diseases risks, except for one paper that showed a risk of type 2 diabetes.
    Tanya Lewis, Scientific American, 13 July 2023
  • Neither the parents, the children nor the research staff knew which of the children were getting sugary foods and which were getting a diet sweetened with aspartame and other artificial sweeteners.
    Richard Klasco, New York Times, 21 Feb. 2020
  • To start, researchers added saccharin, aspartame or sucralose (common artificial sweeteners) to the drinking water of three groups of mice for 11 weeks.
    Carl Engelking, Discover Magazine, 18 Sep. 2014
  • In 1982, Tab was reformulated yet again to include Nutrasweet, also known as aspartame.
    Jeffrey Miller, The Conversation, 23 Nov. 2020
  • Almost 20 years after the letter, people still question aspartame.
    Kat Eschner, Smithsonian, 27 Jan. 2017
  • The tangerine tango and mojito lime flavors — all aspartame-free — will make your evening commute feel slightly more tropical.
    Caroline Picard, Good Housekeeping, 7 Dec. 2018

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'aspartame.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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