Calorie-free in a sentence as an adjective

It's not calorie-free, but over the course of a day it adds up to about a small cup of milk, which I can live with.

He was allowed to drink coffee, tea, and sparkling water, all of which are naturally calorie-free.

This is just about adding calorie-free bulk directly before meals to trigger "fullness".

Furthermore, diet sodas or so called “calorie-free” meals or beverages are restricted.

Oddly, you can still buy sugary drinks in plastic bottles at SFO; only healthy, calorie-free water is banned in plastic.

And thus it's entirely possible that a calorie-free substance, which has impacts on metabolism and how your body decides what to store, can impact weight gain.

Perhaps the term "diet soda" is misleading in itself, but perhaps telling people that drinking a calorie-free drink will make them gain weight is just as silly as telling people it will make them lose weight.

Why don't they just use xylitol/isomalt or any of the other natural, calorie-free, nice tasting sugars?Presumably because they're expensive, but if sold in bulk I'm sure they could bring prices down acceptably...

> > And thus it's entirely possible that a calorie-free substance, which has impacts on metabolism and how your body decides what to store, can impact weight gain.> I disagree, and I'd like some credible referenceys.

Calorie-free definitions

adjective

having relatively few calories; "diet cola"; "light (or lite) beer"; "lite (or light) mayonnaise"; "a low-cal diet"

See also: light lite low-cal