Label \La"bel\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Labeled} (l[=a]"b[e^]ld) or {Labelled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Labeling} or {Labelling}.] 1. To affix a label to; to mark with a name, etc.; as, to label a bottle or a package.
2. To affix in or on a label. [R.]
Since 1975, some 100-200 individuals and companies a year have been fined, mainly for labelling products or advertising jobs in a language other than French.
They are the only machines capable of labelling products on ultra high speed production lines. A small but growing niche market, it is dominated by British-owned companies.
Romanticism is one of those useful terms of critical labelling that means just what we choose it to mean.
There have been 21 reports since 1985, when labelling cautions were strengthened.
This is partly being achieved through the introduction of labelling and the establishment of brand image.
What is important is clear labelling. BSkyB (in which Pearson, owner of the FT, has a 17.5 per cent stake) is setting out to woo the personal investor.
McGregor rejoices in the fact when 'le grand Louvre' is rehung, it will be along rigidly nationalistic lines. At Trafalgar Square, the very word 'Schools' has been banished from the labelling.
Italians - well, their labelling is as anarchic as you might expect. What I am seeking is a term we all can use colloquially.
They all come in small jars with highly distinctive labelling, retailing at up to Pounds 1.50 each and selling in around 300 delis, greengrocers and butchers as well as in Harrods and at the Royal Horticultural Society at Wisley.