Labelling Of Mobile Phones - Gadget Planet

I thought this thread was settled five years ago, but: As I found myself doing when I worked for a short stretch in the UK, ex-pats often pick up European usage. label /ˈleɪbl/ verb (labels, labelling, labelled; US labels, labeling, labeled) 1 attach a label to. 2 assign to a category, especially inaccurately.

3 Biology & Chemistry make (a substance, cell, etc.) identifiable using a label ... To me, a "foodstuff" is a food product. For example, the European Union has regulations for the labelling of foodstuffs. It is not a term widely used outside the food industry.

labelling of mobile phones, In terms of food labelling, the wording is usually “display until (+ date)” and either “best before (+ date)” or “use by (+ date)”. Expiry/expiration is not applicable, and the term “shelf life” is only used to talk about those guidelines – it does not appear on packaging. It simply strikes me as far too jocular to have been in wide-spread serious use. Subject to the same context caveat as above, "the two thousands" or "the twenty hundreds" seem rather more likely. I suspect many people would just avoid labelling those decades at all, for fear of sounding silly.

labelling of mobile phones, I know I have.