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This is a list of chewing gum brands in the world. Chewing gum is a type of gum made for chewing, and dates back at least 5,000 years. Modern chewing gum was originally made of chicle, a natural latex. By the 1960s, chicle was replaced by butadiene-based synthetic rubber which is cheaper to manufacture. Most chewing gums are considered polymers ...
Dentyne (/ ˌ d ɛ n ˈ t iː n /) is a brand of chewing gum and breath mints available in several countries globally. It is owned by Perfetti Van Melle. [1] In 1899, a New York City druggist Franklin V. Canning formulated a chewing gum which he promoted as an aid to oral hygiene. [2] The package read "To prevent decay, To sweeten the breath ...
Clorets is a line of chewing gum and mints made by Cadbury Adams. It was introduced in 1951. It was introduced in 1951. Clorets gum and candy contain Actizol, a proprietary ingredient that contains chlorophyll , which purportedly acts as an active ingredient to eliminate mouth odors . [ 1 ]
An icon of the gum world has experienced its final chew. Ferrara Candy Company confirmed to TODAY.com that it’s discontinuing Fruit Stripe Gum, which has been tickling taste buds since 1969.
Chappies is a brand of bubblegum introduced in South Africa in the late 1940s. [1] In part because of its iconic "Did You Know?" facts printed inside every wrapper, Chappies has been South Africa's best-selling bubblegum for more than 50 years with about 2.5 billion pieces being sold each year.
Over the course of the pandemic, chewing gum sales plummeted. As the Associated Press noted in March of 2024, gum sales have bounced back by about 1% in 2023, but that still marked a 32% drop from ...
In 1996, the company launched its Chocolate Zero, claiming to be the world's first sugarless chocolate. The following year, Lotte became the first in Japan to launch a xylitol-based chewing gum. Because xylitol, unlike other sweeteners, did not produce acid when chewed, the company was able to promote its chewing gum as a cavity-fighting product.
Before you go judging Singapore and its anti-gum-chewing edicts, however, consider that a 2000 study found around 250,000 globs of chewing gum stuck to London's busy Oxford Street, and that in ...