Yes, fructose is classified as a simple sugar, specifically a monosaccharide. On food labels, it is typically listed under "sugars" or "total carbohydrates" as part of the sugar content. If present in significant amounts, it may be explicitly labeled as fructose or included in terms like "sugar" or "added sugars."
Label is a regular verb so to form the past you just add -ed -- labeled
No. Corn Syrup and High Fructose Corn Syrup will be labeled separately.
The past tense of "label" would be "labeled".
No, they would not be required to be labeled. No foods that contain GMOs are required to be labeled as such.
The past tense of "label" is "labeled" in American English and "labelled" in British English.
Montgomery Ward.
what does labeled means for kids
you label a wavelength with amplitude, wavelength, through, and peak.
it means label landmarks
Read the label of your food. You'll see it.
American English tends to spell the past tense as labeled, British as labelled.
That all depends on what adults do with that label. The same applies to any label.