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It does no good whatsoever to ban takeaway food from schools and serve the children only food that they find disgusting and tell them that it's healthy - you're setting them up to believe that "healthy" is automatically a negative word, and to reject anything "healthy" in the future!
BBC: South East: Politics on the menu
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They tend to spread it around your house, which is anything but healthy.
CNN: Give spring a healthier shine
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Today, as your list underscores, our economy is anything but healthy.
FORBES: My Top 10 Economic Worries
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Higher interest rates at a time of slow growth would hamper the US economy, already running a sack race rather than anything remotely resembling a healthy sprint.
FORBES: Threatening Debt Default, Has US Become the New Argentina?
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Anthony seems convinced that Knicks don't need to do anything other than stay healthy and build on a first half that has gone far better than most expected.
WSJ: Knicks Are Good, but Not That Good
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At the same time, the U.S. maintains its healthy appetite for anything Made in China.
FORBES: China Imports Of U.S. Goods A Record-Breaker
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John Lasseter, Pixar's CEO, said he was delighted to take any contributions, but had a healthy suspicion of anything Billy Connolly suggested.
BBC: Scotland arts correspondent
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Anything over 50 is considered healthy.
FORBES: Take That Hard Landing; China Exports Beat Consensus
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By contrast, it was difficult to get a decent copy of anything in Rome, which nursed a healthy inferiority complex as a result.
WSJ: Still Under Cleopatra's Spell
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Fully engaged in exercise, nutrition, muscular science and anything else to build a better body and live a more healthy life.
FORBES: 5 Tools Startup Entrepreneurs Need to Succeed
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Regardless of the term you use, market-gravity is the phenomenon that causes all stocks, even healthy ones, to lose value because investors are selling anything and everything in the belief that the entire market is going down.
FORBES
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Mr Rosen discusses why good inventors require a healthy dose of delusion and just how much practice (at anything from tennis to blacksmithing) is required to turn a journeyman into a master.
ECONOMIST: Why it started in Britain