Laced in a sentence as an adjective

By the time I've laced up my shoes, I'm in the workout mindset. Really, vI know I can trick that part of myself.

The more fiber they laced up in a day, the more they got paid. They knew there was a slight risk the ground wire would be hot once disconnected but they chose to ignore it for financial reasons.

I mean, it is amazing how many people were poking fun at the "awful coding practices" and the "bug-laced codebase". Where were all those people when the code was committed?

But you can charge for information laced with convenience. People are risk avoiding and are even happy to buy things when they aren't treated worse than the actual infringers.

Fast foods, including the ones that claim to be "better," are laced with sugars, sodium, and fat. We must demand policies that protect us from harm and the greed-driven irresponsible practices of Big Food.

They would, however, still face resistance from a Python community that wants to neither give up nor rewrite their PyObject-laced libraries.

The actions that led to his trial also are laced with strong moral beliefs that seem to conflict with the law, leading me to believe that perhaps he knew his actions would cause him to become a martyr. Ilya on the other hand, is a textbook ******* case.

Here are some excerpts from the book that I particularly enjoyed: "On a cold winter day, Carmack laced up his shoes, slipped on his jacket, and headed out into the Madison snow. The town was blanketed in the stuff, cars caked in frost, trees dangling ice.

If the product owner, PM or a junior dev can approach you and get a straight-laced answer tailored to the skill-level individual you're doing really well indeed. - Every team and company do things differently.

The web was horrible dumping ground before Google - laced with Portals and flashing display ads, pathetic Search, fragmented content. Perhaps you have not been around in the nineties / early 00, but the web was far more exciting and cool that the corporate BS that it is today.

I mean, my start-up is going to sell baby food laced with arsenic because I once heard that arsenic makes babies smarter and I think I once ingested some accidentally and I didn't die. If it really does end up killing babies, well, the market will eventually correct itself.

This doesn't mean either practice is noble or desirable, but it's patently ridiculous to draw false hyperbole-laced equivalencies all over the map.

If someone checks into the hospital because of a bad reaction to *****, they should be in a position to tell their doctor exactly what ***** they took -- and their doctor should be able to assume that those ***** were not laced with heavy metals.

Fracking also results in the generation of millions of gallons of chemically-laced water per well, with no appropriate means of disposal or long-term storage. Obviously I do not accept your assertion that groundwater contamination is 'exceedingly unlikely'.

Pumping millions of gallons of chemical-laced water under high pressure to fracture geological formations and extract gas is akin to fishing with dynamite, but the long-term environmental implications are far, far worse. Because once the underground aquifers which form part of the groundwater table are disrupted / damaged they can't be fixed.

The premise of your argument is that it's reasonable for a project manager to invoke "Finnish Culture" as a justification for calling people on their team names and singling them out for expletive-laced approbation in public. I don't know a lot of Finns, but do you honestly think a typical Finnish person would be comfortable with having their culture summed up that way?

While I am sure this guy has faced real disadvantage from some bigoted people, this post is laced with racism against white people and ridiculously over-the-top statements about colonialism and "neoliberal white supremacy".

WRT "if I drank radiation laced water because a chemical company was disposing of their waste in my backyard and I didn't know" from my limited understanding of Libertarianism, they do believe the government and legal system should promote property rights. Therefore, if a company pollutes your water supply, you would have legal recourse to recover damages assuming you live long enough.

C-level executives were slaughtered and we were soon treated to a blustery, military-metaphor-laced "hardass" speech to rally the troops, courtesy of the new VP who was keen to let us know that business was war and we were in it to win it, etc. It was lead bullet time.

The web was horrible dumping ground before Google - laced with Portals and flashing display ads, pathetic Search, fragmented content. Chrome's the best browser, Gmail the best Email client, Google Maps / Earth the best mapping client, there's only 1 YouTube, the Mobile landscape would be a walled garden with every user a hostage if it wasn't for Android, then there's a zillion other apps I use on a daily basis that is best-in-class like Hangouts, Analytics, Google G+ Communities, Groups, etc - and I use them all for free.

Laced definitions

adjective

closed with a lace; "snugly laced shoes"

See also: tied

adjective

edged or streaked with color; "white blossoms with purple-laced petals"