Sweetened in a sentence as an adjective

Where can you find a diet soft drink or protein bar sweetened with saccharin?

When I showed disinterest, he "sweetened the pot" with an offer of a $25 gift card.

The total intake from food and the sweetened water were not matched for calories.

I have the same objection with bottled sweetened tea, for example.

The only thing matched for calories was the amount of sweetened water; rats were allowed to eat as much food as they want.

Avoid anything that is not sweetened exclusively by fruit.

Drinking sweetened drinks is exactly what makes the difference for me between losing and gaining weight.

The first whiskey I've tried it with was Glenfiddich 12, and I was amazed at how it sweetened/changed the flavor profile with just a tiny splash.

By the third or fourth week if I accidentally drank sweetened iced tea instead of unsweetened I would nearly spit it out due to the awful taste.

Sure, but far more jobs would be lost if we corrected the more serious problem, which is the country's addiction to energy-dense sweetened drinks.

If it "took over the world", it would be sweetened, boiled, extracted, and fried into chips with none of the nutritional benefits people are seeking therefrom anyway.

Then the logic question as far as the OP's original topic is this:Can any app truly be a substitute good for a sweetened beverage with stimulants in it?

Honey's also good for us, or else they wouldn't point out that things are sweetened with honey instead of 'refined' sugar, right?As with many issues, there's a bathtub curve of understanding.

I agree that a lot of mass produced food is unhealthy and probably excessively seasoned and sweetened to improve market appeal, but that isn't really an argument for why Soylent is better or worse than Ensure.

"The first study showed that male rats given water sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup in addition to a standard diet of rat chow gained much more weight than male rats that received water sweetened with table sugar, or sucrose, in conjunction with the standard diet.

If committed investors raise the valuation of a startup, would it make sense for a startup to offer a slightly-sweetened valuation for the first investor to commit?I understand that no one likes to have the price raised on them later, but perhaps the underlying truth of increasing valuations could be restated in a different way so it seems more like a discount to the first-in vs a price-hike to the last in.

Sweetened definitions

adjective

with sweetening added

See also: sugared sweet sweet-flavored