Butter
in sentence
157 examples of Butter in a sentence
The characters are small animals with the consistency of
butter
and they seem to just get laughs out of blood and gore.
I am not trying to say it's the next best thing to peanut
butter
and it's time for an Oscar; I am saying it was a fun ride and worth the E-Ticket!
“Whenever we read an article about the health dangers of butter, we would immediately run out and buy as much
butter
as we could find,” she told me.
“We knew it meant there was about to be a
butter
shortage.”
The impact is most pronounced in African cities, where prices for white rice, frozen chicken, bread, butter, eggs, and even carbonated soft drinks are at least 24% higher than in other cities around the world.
Attlee recalled, “I had the feeling that they thought I was offering them margarine instead of butter.”
As grain was fed to chicken, sheep, and cows, meat, milk, cheese, and
butter
became contaminated.
The European Commission has been considering retaliatory tariffs on a variety of imports from the United States – ranging from Harley Davidson motorcycles to food products like orange juice and peanut
butter
– in the hope that affected American producers put pressure on the Trump administration.
Ever since, mainstream economists have earned their bread and
butter
patiently explaining why Marx was wrong.
In advanced economies, Keynesian economics is the bread and
butter
of economic forecasting and policy making.
A strategic lack of transparency is the bread and
butter
of shrewd politicians who want to please a lobby by hiding the costs of the public's largesse from the majority of citizens.
They understand finance and economics, the bread and
butter
of the World Bank, and have a network of connections to leverage the Bank’s effectiveness.
According to India’s Defense Minister, A.K. Anthony, presumably an expert on
butter
as well as guns, Bush’s statement was “a cruel joke.”
“It was as if,” Attlee recalled, “I had offered them margarine instead of butter.”
Research commissioned by the National Farmers Union predicts that a post-Brexit UK is likely to see its imports of beef, poultry, butter, and milk powder increase.
Derided as “bull butter,” opponents claimed that margarine contained “diseased and putrid beef, dead horses, dead hogs, dead dogs, mad dogs, and downed sheep.”
Likewise, North Korea’s focus on nuclear, rather than conventional, weapons may be enabling it to minimize the tradeoff between guns and
butter.
Recommended measures include providing essential vitamins and minerals through enriched foods and supplements; promoting breastfeeding and nutritious complementary feeding for weaning babies; and treating severely malnourished children with therapeutic foods such as specially fortified peanut
butter.
This is the classic “guns versus butter” debate over how resources, from dollars to presidential attention, should be allocated.
Such dark protectionist thoughts are far from the minds of the benevolent organizers of the United Kingdom’s annual “Fairtrade Fortnight,” during which I just bought two bars of fair-trade chocolate and a jar of fair-trade chunky peanut
butter.
One Russian friend told me, “Whenever we would read an article about the health dangers of butter, we would immediately run out and buy as much
butter
as we could find, because we knew it meant there would be a
butter
shortage.”
But, whether formalized or not, simplified narratives are social scientists’ bread and
butter.
The problem is not guns vs. butter, but guns vs.
butter
vs. taxes.
Whether to support the right or the center-left was a classic choice between guns and butter, security and prosperity.
I had the feeling that they thought I was offering them margarine instead of butter.”
Opposition to refugees and migrants – and even demonization of them and their supporters – is their political bread and
butter.
In North Africa, textiles, garments, and aeronautics are among the leading sectors, and West Africa is investing in cocoa, shea butter, and cassava products.
But under Trump, any sector of the economy, from automobiles to peanut butter, apparently qualifies as essential to national security.
But a war economy is a shortage economy in which you can’t have both guns and
butter.
Butter
has to be rationed to produce more guns.
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