How to Use waste product in a Sentence
waste product
noun-
The main waste product of the Sims plant are bales of filmy, thin plastics, like dry cleaner bags.
— New York Daily News Editorial Board, New York Daily News, 20 May 2024 -
One of the byproducts of burning protein is a waste product called urea.
— Alex Hutchinson, Outside Online, 10 Sep. 2024 -
That's their honeydew or waste product coming out the back end ...
— John Dodge, CBS News, 15 May 2024 -
The second test is a blood test to measure for a waste product called creatinine.
— Alex Groth, Journal Sentinel, 29 Mar. 2023 -
The new pig kidney is making urine as well as creatinine, a waste product.
— Roni Caryn Rabin, New York Times, 21 Mar. 2024 -
In order to grow, plants absorb carbon dioxide, use it to build their tissues, and release oxygen as a waste product.
— Ferris Jabr, The Atlantic, 25 June 2024 -
Creatinine is a waste product that is caused by the breakdown of creatine.
— Jillian Kubala, Health, 12 Aug. 2024 -
According to the Mayo Clinic, protein in your urine, which is also called proteinuria, is a waste product that your kidneys normally get rid of.
— Lisa Mulcahy, Men's Health, 31 July 2023 -
The organ not only produced urine, but also removed serum creatinine, a waste product that can build up in the blood of patients with kidney disease.
— Amy Yurkanin | Ayurkanin@al.com, al, 17 Aug. 2023 -
Your muscles produce lactic acid, a waste product of your cells turning carbs into energy.
— Lauren Del Turco, Health, 20 Nov. 2023 -
Salt slag is a waste product normally headed to landfills after the aluminum recycling process.
— Karl Schneider, The Indianapolis Star, 28 Mar. 2024 -
Interest in hydrogen as a fuel that produces only water as a waste product when consumed in a fuel cell appears to be booming around the world.
— Kelly Sims Gallagher, Foreign Affairs, 23 Apr. 2024 -
Your lungs bring oxygen to the body to provide energy and also remove carbon dioxide as a waste product, but the heart pumps that oxygen to the muscles that are doing the actual exercise.
— Good Housekeeping, 31 Mar. 2023 -
Green and her husband believe the material being spread on the field close to their home in rural Mayberry is a waste product from processing food — most often chickens — called DAF.
— Christine Condon, Baltimore Sun, 11 Mar. 2024 -
Because stormwater is still erroneously classified as a waste product, its management is handled by the same department that picks up the trash.
— Curbed, 1 Feb. 2023 -
All touring and production vehicles will be electric or fueled by 100 percent waste product HVO fuel.
— Evan Minsker, Pitchfork, 5 Dec. 2023 -
New materials Partanna uses a combination of brine and a steelmaking waste product called slag to make its cement blocks.
— Yusuf Khan, WSJ, 24 Aug. 2023 -
Sulphur is much more readily abundant as a waste product and could be sourced in local markets unlike some of those other materials, according to the companies.
— Eric D. Lawrence, Detroit Free Press, 25 May 2023 -
Shredded denim fibers from recycled jeans, a common waste product, were twisted into a yarn and linked together, producing a stylish denim interior in the EX30.
— Morgan Korn, ABC News, 16 July 2023 -
Plasma creatinine, a waste product that enters the blood from muscles, is typically filtered out by kidneys, so increased levels affirmed their suspicions.
— Irene Wright, Miami Herald, 27 Mar. 2024 -
The 28-year-old is monitoring dozens of glass bottles containing different combinations of rum distillery waste product and sargassum and using the results to work on her thesis, which will also help shape Rum and Sargassum’s business product.
— Stephanie Hanes, The Christian Science Monitor, 21 Nov. 2023 -
Nuclear energy generates large swaths of power without carbon dioxide emissions, but critics point to its radioactive waste product that can be harmful to the environment.
— Ryan King, Washington Examiner, 15 Apr. 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'waste product.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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