Right-wing religious zealotry is actually a throw-back to the intolerance that led to the creation of America in the first place. |
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We still see evidence of abiding bigotry and intolerance, in ugly words and awful violence, in burned churches and bombed buildings. |
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I also like Mill's querulous intolerance of the conformist pressure of orthodoxy and his impatience with unthoughtfulness. |
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In Hebrews we also meet the strong protests of the jealous God, who is intolerant of rivals with a holy intolerance. |
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Reports have suggested that only a small proportion of those who claimed to suffer from wheat intolerance showed any symptoms in blind tests. |
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Due to their relative intolerance of carbohydrate, diets for carnivorous fish like rainbow trout consist primarily of proteins and lipids. |
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The high prevalence of fructose intolerance found among patients in our study reaffirms previous studies. |
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Reassure patients with a food intolerance that they do not have a food allergy. |
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The symptoms of food intolerance can include burping, indigestion, flatulence, loose stools, headaches, flushing, or nervousness. |
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Replacing the zealotry of religious intolerance with a secular version is hardly an enlightened alternative. |
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Despite his intolerance for hybrid colonial furniture, Nutting was forced to capitalize on the market for institutional furniture. |
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British Muslims can peg their alienation solely on Islamophobia and intolerance for only so long. |
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The apologetic justification of church division has in many cases been a source of heated confessional intolerance. |
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Grandiosity, rigidity, and intolerance of ambiguity, and a tendency to obsess about things are among the traits associated with the dry drunk. |
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While indigo is no longer a tool of oppression, it is still an area rooted in fiefdom and intolerance. |
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The idea is to do your own small bit, in whatever way, in checking the growing intolerance in people. |
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This vanishing reflects both the culture's increasing intolerance of sentimentalism and mainstream comics' marginalizing of women readers. |
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He had the reputation of being a bully and arrogant but only his intolerance of sham made him feared. |
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Ice cream, milkshakes and aged cheeses are easier than milk for most people with lactose intolerance, but they are high in fat. |
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The checks and balances and disciplines that keep intolerance in check may also go. |
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And so the intolerance that plagues this country continues unconfronted and unabated. |
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Our multicultural society will officially tolerate anything except racial or cultural intolerance. |
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Stools of children with lactose intolerance tend to be acidic and contain undigested sugar. |
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Probiotic bacteria in fermented and unfermented dairy products can improve lactose digestion and squelch symptoms of intolerance. |
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Most patients had a combination of myopathic features, such as weakness, pain, exercise intolerance, or hypotonia. |
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This kind of small-mindedness and intolerance is what keeps people like the two of you from learning anything. |
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The perception of lactose intolerance as a health problem is a rather narrow Western view. |
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The level of ignorance and intolerance that I saw expressed by my own classmates was enough for me to be nauseated. |
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Perhaps as a backlash against political intolerance, frat boy chic now appears to be king. |
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At the end of its first two nights, the Republican convention is a mix of tolerance voiced and intolerance unvoiced. |
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Side effects such as gastrointestinal intolerance and minor urinary symptoms are usually mild and are predominantly dose dependent. |
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There is still some confusion over the difference between a food intolerance and a food allergy. |
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Other conditions to consider include celiac sprue and lactose or fructose intolerance. |
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Scotland could become an international byword for backwardness, intolerance and prejudice if that's what its elected representatives want. |
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At 8 months of age, Elisabeth developed temporary milk intolerance and oral candidiasis. |
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More voices like these are sorely needed to counteract the intolerance and hate-mongering that all too often pass for expressions of faith. |
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Another common intolerance is to dairy products, including cow's milk, cheese, yoghurt and cream. |
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Perhaps its this intolerance for boredom that explains some of the bassist's more outrageous adventures. |
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They claim to be the high priests of tolerance, and yet they practice intolerance against us. |
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Many young people are taking an active role in fighting homophobia and intolerance. |
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Here he found much less intolerance and pathologizing of his behaviors and differences. |
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But there was no difference in glucose intolerance between hypoxic and hypoglycemic conditions. |
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Those people who would take us back to an age of ignorance and intolerance should be exposed and shunned. |
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I am really quite disturbed by the fanaticism and intolerance shown by these ill-bred youths. |
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It does little to advance the debate, and simply indicates a measure of immaturity and intolerance. |
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Just as much hate and intolerance comes from the far left, and it makes me ill. |
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Everyone here agrees on the need for action to combat racism and intolerance. |
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It shows a degree of intolerance, inconsistent with the principles of our democratic polity. |
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But those who support the scheme have also suggested that it could be used to promote integration and reduce religious intolerance. |
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When we do not use our time distinctly then intemperance, intolerance and imprudence turn out to be our masters. |
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Who is going to help the victims of religious intolerance in Britain's immigrant communities? |
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Indeed, while the evidence is thin, it suggests that evangelical schools promote higher levels of civic engagement but also greater intolerance. |
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This project introduces children to difficult issues such as racism and intolerance in our society. |
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The implication is that this is needless suffering or, even worse, suffering caused by human beings with their dogmatic religious intolerance. |
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People are killing each other because of bigotry, fanaticism and prejudice, so why are we adding to the burden of intolerance? |
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By reaching out and protecting each other from intolerance and injustice, we hope to forge a better future for our children. |
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But such condemnation of violence and intolerance on campus is rarely backed up by facts and figures. |
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These kinds of inappropriate statements only create more religious hatred, intolerance, discrimination and racism against Muslims. |
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And, that issue aside, it is not intolerance to argue against opinions you think are wrong. |
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Only that way can both adherents and innocents alike learn the wages of allowing their country to be hijacked by agents of intolerance. |
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He beckoned us to be more understanding and tolerant, at a time when intolerance abounded. |
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But, how could this be done without revisiting the World War I experience of oppressive intolerance? |
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We have continued to try and treat a variety of the problems that we see in these patients, one being the orthostatic intolerance. |
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If you fail all the allergy tests, than a food intolerance is probably to blame. |
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The simplest way to test your child for food intolerance is to remove the food from their diet for at least five days. |
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An increased sensitivity or intolerance to certain foods, may also contribute. |
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The campaign is to raise awareness of the problems associated with cow's milk intolerance. |
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Fructose intolerance involves several non-specific symptoms such as bloating, abdominal pain and tension, gas, excess belching, and diarrhea. |
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Of these, how many have been seen by a gastroenterologist before being labelled, and how many have had lactose intolerance excluded? |
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No correlation of fasting glucose with birth weight was noted and there was a positive trend of glucose intolerance with increasing weight. |
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A fasting or elimination test can be performed to determine if diarrhea is caused by a food allergy or intolerance. |
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The inquest heard that Mrs Walker suffered from a wheat intolerance and on the day she died ate a Cornish pasty for lunch. |
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In both cases, an intellectual commitment to liberty is coupled with quite extraordinary intolerance in practice. |
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Perhaps as a backlash against political intolerance, dumbass frat boy chic now appears to be king. |
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In the cradle of liberty, equality and fraternity, a presidential candidate is accused of bigotry, intolerance and some say anti-Semitism. |
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After 1945, World War II was conceptualized here as a crusade against absolutism and intolerance. |
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It preaches a message of racism, intolerance and brutality that flies in the face of this country's history and heritage. |
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The objectives of Harmony Day, which are particularly poignant at this point in time, relate to racism, intolerance and prejudice. |
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The disorder occurs in people with a genetic intolerance of gluten, a food protein contained in wheat and other grains. |
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They suffer from Coeliac disease, which is characterised by an intolerance of gluten, found in wheat and other grains. |
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Recently, I've found myself more than a little discomfited by examples of intolerance that seem to be cropping up around me. |
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If you have lost enchantment, you are liable to divisiveness, intolerance, and aggression. |
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In populations where drinking cows' milk is not the done thing, lactose intolerance is still the norm. |
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Nor was the significance of the event merely symbolic for Bayle, since he himself was a victim of the intolerance to an extreme degree. |
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The replacement of milk with yogurt or fermented dairy products may allow for better digestion and decreased diarrhea and other symptoms associated with lactose intolerance. |
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Prednisone may cause fluid and sodium retention with increased calcium and potassium, as well as carbohydrate intolerance, glycosuria, and hyperglycemia. |
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When was the last time you heard of someone with a sweet potato, broccoli, or blueberry intolerance? |
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Anyone who suffers from gluten sensitivity, intolerance, or celiac disease knows how troublesome the problem is. |
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Adults from Eastern countries have, for genetic reasons, much lower levels of lactase, and so lactose intolerance, rather than milk intolerance is really the normal state. |
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Food allergy can be mixed up with a food intolerance or food poisoning. |
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He was incorruptible, and had an intolerance to sloth and greed. |
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Despite their growing numbers, South Asians have been loath to flex their political muscles or be vocal about religious intolerance or discrimination. |
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Their incuriosity, and hence their intolerance, spring from the same root. |
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In this process the human proteins are inactivated and agglomerates are formed which may be the cause of the observed intolerance to the injection solutions. |
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But, for people with gluten intolerance, or celiac sprue, the body perceives gluten as a foreign substance and responds with a full-blown immune response. |
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The researchers found that the fake stuff drives the kind of glucose intolerance that can lead to diabetes in human. |
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Food intolerance occurs when your body is unable to digest a certain component of a food, such as the protein called gluten. |
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These include public violence, throwing articles at persons, vehicles, gatherings conducing to riot, disorder or intolerance, and assaulting or resisting peace officer. |
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Every renunciation of instinct now becomes a dynamic source of conscience and every fresh renunciation increases the latter's severity and intolerance. |
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Because oats have a lower gluten content than wheat, people who have a gluten intolerance can safely enjoy a bowl of porridge or biscuits made with oats rather than flour. |
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At the same time, this secularism also has traits more commonly found in revealed religions, such as a terrifying intolerance of those who break ranks. |
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Some theorists expect that the same forces may also drive space colonization, as religious intolerance has not been eliminated in the centuries since these events. |
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There is no use fighting intolerance by physically harming someone. |
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The breakdown of the politically correct liberal open-mindedness into frenzied intolerance of criticism and the taboo of peace was dramatic and instantaneous. |
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In their declaration, participants condemned all organisations and individuals promoting hatred or acts of racism, xenophobia, discrimination or intolerance. |
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We need to speak out against intolerance that masquerades as tolerance. |
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We must, however, remain vigilant in our efforts to marginalize the voices of intolerance. |
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Oppression and intolerance continue in a time-honoured tradition. |
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From the opening games, spectators and the general public have understood the message that racism, intolerance and discrimination have no place in the game. |
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Only that link can effect the enormous changes needed and thwart the dark forces of intolerance that today threaten the fragile freedoms of the South. |
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Lactose intolerance is the inability to digest significant amounts of lactose because there's a shortage of an enzyme that breaks down milk sugar. |
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You were, generally, biddable on immigration, and tough on intolerance. |
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We as a community know what it is to suffer bigotry and intolerance. |
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You're talking about monotheism as if its synonomous with fundamentalism and religious intolerance, which strikes me as a bit of a straw man argument. |
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He can be sure that when he does, someone will accuse him of intolerance. |
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We need to find common moral ground within the civilised world over and beyond the hatred and intolerance of the religious chauvinisms and nationalisms of the past. |
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It was also seen by some as an implicit rebuke to right-wing Republicans who had alienated unaligned voters by their apparent intolerance and belligerence. |
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Lactose intolerance can cause bloating, cramping, diarrhea and excess gas. |
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Beth's hyper as it is and has a bit of a caffeine intolerance. |
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This aggressive new strain of right-wing religious zealotry is actually a throwback to the intolerance that led to the creation of America in the first place. |
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The majority of people in society may come to regard fornication, adultery and casual sexual relationships with intolerance, indignation and disgust. |
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Also known as celiac sprue, nontropical sprue and gluten-sensitive enteropathy, celiac disease occurs in people who have a susceptibility to gluten intolerance. |
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Long-term intolerance, undiagnosed, can cause serious health problems. |
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Universities where such freedom of thought and opinion is not nurtured and protected will soon find themselves enslaved to narrowness, bigotry and intolerance. |
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But progressives must not seek victory by appealing to intolerance and unreason and rejecting the traditions of the Enlightenment that we alone seem to embrace today. |
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If anything, they made a contribution toward intolerance and legitimizing Duke's racist record. |
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As Keon explains, lactose intolerance reflects a lack of lactase, the enzyme used to digest the milk sugar lactose. |
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She said that chronic inflammation due to food intolerance can lead to weight gain. |
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This is why we get Montezuma's revenge, while natives do not, and why we get food allergies, as well as problems such as lactose intolerance. |
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Likewise, allergy, food intolerance, cancer, and immunodeficiency cross and share autoimmunity. |
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Lactose intolerance, caused by your small intestine being unable to break down lactase, an enzyme found in dairy foods. |
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People with lactose intolerance have to carefully avoid milk products to prevent diarrhea, gas, nausea, abdominal bloating, and cramps. |
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Lactose intolerance is an example of a food intolerance where the body struggles to digest lactose. |
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Milk products suitable for people with lactose intolerance will be launched later this year. |
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People with lactose intolerance often find that they can eat cheese and yoghurt without any problems. |
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Many kidney patients have noted to me severe cold intolerance and that their urine looks much foamier when they feel chilled. |
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Metabolic syndrome is not pre-diabetes, insulin resistance or glucose intolerance. |
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That intolerance could come back to sting Democrats in November. |
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Betjeman, besides loving England so much, also hated England and the intolerance of our priggery and hypocrisy. |
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The city has long been known as a scene of racial intolerance and discord. |
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Coeliac disease is an autoimmune disease that's caused by an intolerance to gluten, a type of protein found in wheat, barley and rye. |
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This was an apparently peaceful transition and there is little evidence of religious intolerance in Shetland's recorded history. |
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This created a climate of intolerance that led to calls for jobs to be preserved for Protestants. |
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The two main allegations are that, by its nature, Wahhabism encourages intolerance and promotes terrorism. |
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As a satirical polemicist, he frequently made use of his works to criticize intolerance, religious dogma, and the French institutions of his day. |
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These, along with his Letters on the English mark the beginning of Voltaire's open criticism of intolerance and established religions. |
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The variety of sects may well have worked to make religious intolerance impractical. |
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He helped free historiography from antiquarianism, Eurocentrism, religious intolerance and a concentration on great men, diplomacy, and warfare. |
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They variously attacked spiritual and scientific authority, dogmatism, intolerance, censorship, and economic and social restraints. |
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All forms of intolerance, the whole idea of that which is different from me is necessarily evil. |
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They have advocated for a culture free of institutionalized racism, sexism, classism, ableism, ageism, and religious intolerance. |
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He further said that leaders should resolve the issues politically as the political intolerance will add fuel to the fire. |
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The lack of phenotypes may also hamper the application of systems biology to the study of chemical intolerance. |
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It's only when intolerance puts on the sheepskin and starts being celebrated as strong-mindedness that it becomes worrying. |
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We learned about the noncoding region of the gene, the gene responsible for lactose intolerance, and finished Lesson Four. |
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Consider and treat for orthostatic intolerance with increased salt, water, support stockings, midodrine, and even Dexedrine. |
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At other times they are joined with intolerance, bigotry, fanaticism, oppression, sexism, ethnocentrism, persecution, ignorance, and superstition. |
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Last October, Heiner Bielefeldt, the UN's special rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief, spoke out against intolerance toward religious groups such as Falun Gong. |
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Wicked Good Cinnabon Cinnamon Roll Cupcake Jar is the first Cinnabon product allowing people with gluten sensitivity or intolerance to enjoy the flavors of Cinnabon. |
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Over 250 original recipes for every meal provides many satisfying choices for all kinds of meals, covering lactose intolerance, gluten-free choices, and more. |
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We are not so inclusivist as to tolerate intolerance such as yours. |
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The arrival of Afghan refugees in the western provinces has stimulated interest in Pashto music, although there has been intolerance of it in some places. |
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In a situation of insulin resistance, BCAAs are used for gluconeogenesis through pyruvate transamination into alanine, there by contributing to glucose intolerance. |
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Treatment with neutral lactase has been shown to reduce symptoms of lactose intolerance more effectively than treatment with standard, acid lactase supplements. |
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Recalcitrants who violate the PC taboo are likely to be subjected to a media keelhauling and accused of intolerance, racism, bigotry, and insensitivity. |
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At that time, she was found to be hypokalemic and hypertensive with signs of CS including truncal obesity, striae, glucose intolerance, hirsutism, and depression. |
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A large-scale study of ancient genetics, published in the June 11 Nature, provides evidence for migrations and lactose intolerance in Bronze Age Eurasia. |
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The phrase refers to abuses of the people by royalty and the clergy that Voltaire saw around him, and the superstition and intolerance that the clergy bred within the people. |
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Too often, people equate lactose intolerance with milk allergv. |
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