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Medicine Very Common

Medicine has 7 different meanings across 2 categories:

Noun · Verb

Definitions
Noun
1

the branches of medical science that deal with nonsurgical techniques

"The department specializes in medicine, focusing on treating patients through advanced therapies rather than surgery."

2

(medicine) something that treats or prevents or alleviates the symptoms of disease

"After running a fever all night, she finally took some medicine to help alleviate her symptoms and get back to sleep."

3

the learned profession that is mastered by graduate training in a medical school and that is devoted to preventing or alleviating or curing diseases and injuries

"he studied medicine at Harvard"

4

punishment for one's actions

"you have to face the music"

"take your medicine"

5

A substance which specifically promotes healing when ingested or consumed in some way.

"After taking the medicine, she felt her fever break and her headache finally subside."

In plain English: Medicine is any substance used to treat or prevent sickness and injury.

"She took her medicine after dinner to help her sleep."

Usage: Use "medicine" to refer to any substance taken internally or applied externally to treat illness and promote healing. Do not use it to describe general health advice or the medical profession itself.

Verb
1

treat medicinally, treat with medicine

"The herbal tea was brewed specifically to treat her cold medicinally rather than just for warmth."

2

To treat with medicine.

"The doctor prescribed antibiotics to treat his sore throat with medicine."

In plain English: To medicine something means to treat it with medicine to make it better.

"The doctor will not prescribe medicine for such a minor infection."

Usage: The verb form of "medicine" means to treat an ailment using drugs or remedies. You should use it only when describing the act of administering medication, not for general healing or recovery.

Example Sentences
"She took her medicine after dinner to help her sleep." noun
"He took his morning medicine with a glass of water." noun
"The new medicine helped her feel better in just one day." noun
"She works at the pharmacy and sells various types of medicine." noun
"The doctor will not prescribe medicine for such a minor infection." verb
Related Terms
doctor pill medication pills pediatrics chewable winter worm errhine stomatic resp maturant antiparalytic immobilon shipman effect konseal medical practitioner polychrest medicines pharmacopolist pulmonology
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
medical science drug learned profession punishment treat
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
allergology anesthesiology angiology bacteriology biomedicine cardiology dentistry prosthetics dermatology emergency medicine endocrinology epidemiology forensic medicine gastroenterology geriatrics gynecology hematology hygiene immunology internal medicine nephrology nuclear medicine neurology neuropsychiatry nosology obstetrics oncology ophthalmology otology pharmacology pharmacy psychiatry pediatrics podiatry proctology rheumatology rhinolaryngology space medicine sports medicine therapeutics thoracic medicine traumatology tropical medicine urology veterinary medicine virology acyclovir alendronate allopurinol amrinone analgesic angiogenesis inhibitor antiarrhythmic antibacterial anticholinergic anticholinesterase anticoagulant anticonvulsant antidepressant antidiabetic antidiarrheal antidiuretic antiemetic antihistamine antihypertensive anti-inflammatory antiprotozoal antipyretic antiseptic antispasmodic antitussive antiviral APC astringent atomic cocktail azathioprine blocker bronchodilator calcium blocker carminative clofibrate clopidogrel bisulfate cold medicine counterirritant cytotoxic drug decongestant demulcent diaphoretic disulfiram dose Drixoral drug cocktail expectorant fixed-combination drug gemfibrozil hematinic herbal medicine histamine blocker immunosuppressant inhalant isoproterenol isosorbide lipid-lowering medicine methacholine nux vomica over-the-counter drug oxytocic paregoric patent medicine penicillamine pentylenetetrazol pharmaceutical placebo powder prescription drug probenecid purgative remedy rubefacient sedative soothing syrup specific sucralfate sudorific suppository tincture tonic tyrosine kinase inhibitor vermicide vermifuge preventive medicine alternative medicine complementary medicine drug salve

Origin

The word "medicine" entered English from the Old French medecine, which itself came from the Latin medicina. Originally meaning "the healing art" or "a remedy," it referred to the practice of treating illness and the remedies used within that practice.

Rhyming Words
ine sine vine line mine bine zine wine dine eine pine gine kine rine fine nine tine cine meine reine
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