Dictionary
To labelling
verb
To put a label (a ticket or sign) on (something).
Exact(60)
You are opposed to labelling gay people "evil".
Expert view: Bill Oddie's guide to labelling Ornithologist This is a very dangerous one.
Lately, belatedly perhaps, the press has taken to labelling this habit of his explicitly.
When it comes to labelling behaviour as "safe" or "risky", it's essential that we try to take these differences into account.
In the west, we are used to labelling terrorist attacks against western targets as tragedies – but Russian terror victims are often placed in a category apart.
And Wally Serote, a leading poet and writer, suggested the painting was no different to labelling black people "kaffirs" – a highly offensive term.
Neither has resorted to quotas, nor to labelling ethnic minorities, which France resists so strongly.France cannot treat the problems in the banlieues merely as a security issue.
In a country that has been happily gobbling GM food for 20 years, plenty of consumers have probably never given any thought to labelling.
The Turkish government, bitterly opposed to labelling the 1915 mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman forces as genocide, has said the German parliament's approval of the Armenian genocide bill was "null and void".
Russia is not known for its pleasant urban environments, and having travelled through most of Russia and the former Soviet Union, I get used to labelling the better cities as "not bad for the region", or "reasonably nice".
The company's algorithmic people profiling also extends to labelling users as having particular political views, and/or having racial and ethnic/multicultural affinities.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com