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  1. 升糖指數高的水果 相關

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  2. CONTOUR® PLUS ELITE可透過CONTOUR®DIABETES App手機程式分享或監察血糖紀錄。 獨特的smartLIGHT™功能,使用三色指示燈,助您清晰簡易地取讀血糖讀數,即到萬寧官方網店選購。

  3. 專為關注血糖人士而設,或有助穩定血糖水平,同時維持心臟健康。可作代餐,明。 專為關注血糖人士而設,穩糖護心營養組合,或有助穩定血糖水平,同時維持心臟健康。

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  1. sweeten the pot. Make something more attractive financially. The term dates from about 1900 and alludes to card games such as poker, where it means to add money to the pool. It is now used figuratively, as in “To sweeten the pot for members, the museum offers a 10 percent discount in its gift shop.”. See also: pot, sweeten.

  2. An emphatic or exaggerated way of asking "please." Sometimes used sarcastically or ironically. Please can I have some ice cream, Mommy? Pretty please with sugar on top?Timmy, I've asked you a dozen times to clean that room. So for the last time, pretty please with sugar on top—clean your room!What a moronic piece of legislation!

  3. dated A quaint, informal, and lighthearted expression of farewell. Primarily heard in UK. Thank you for your hospitality, but I had best be going. Toodle-pip! She waved out the window of the train to her family and shouted, "Toodle-pip!"

  4. You picked bright, neon-red wallpaper for our bedroom? What are you smoking? A: "If you think about it, it makes total sense that the mainstream media is controlled by a cabal of wealthy Freemasons." B: "Dude, what are you smoking?" A: "I just bought us tickets to Tokyo!

  5. old chestnut. A stale joke, anecdote, or adage. This term has a specific source, the play The Broken Sword by William Dimond, first produced in 1816. The principal character, a Captain Xavier, constantly repeats the same stories, one of which involves a cork tree. Pablo, another character, interrupts, saying, “Chestnut, you mean, captain.

  6. not least. As or more notably compared to other elements; especially or in particular. They're going to delay the movie's launch, not least due to the controversy surrounding the lead actor. I decided to take the job for several reasons, not least of which is the short commute. See also: least, not.

  7. slang To be, or be perceived as, unpleasant or unsavory. Stay away from that gang of kids from the other side of town—they're bad news.Coach lets me play a lot, so if he gets fired, it will be bad news for me.Our wedding is this weekend, so a snowstorm would be bad news indeed! See also: bad, news.