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Discover LudwigThe part of the sentence 'zero calories' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to food or drinks with no caloric content. For example, "This sparkling water has zero calories".
Exact(49)
Zero Calories.
Hence, zero calories.
"You can have 200 calories, or you can have zero calories with NutraSweet.
It's the Z-word that marketers are latching onto: with zero calories, carbs or sugars.
(Except snow, which, amazingly, has zero calories!) Encourage bad global-warming jokes.
Not that zero calories or the absence of nutrients is anything new to dieters or drinks.
Similar(11)
It's just natural, zero calorie.
It was like turning down a zero calorie but as delicious-as-creme-brulee dessert.
Stay away from food which is marketed as "low or zero calorie".
Twelve hundred pounds, seven feet tall, two million calories.
"A hundred and fifty or two hundred calories," he said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com