Word Meanings - PRESCRIPTION - Book Publishers vocabulary database
A direction of a remedy or of remedies for a disease, and the manner of using them; a medical recipe; also, a prescribed remedy. (more info) inscription, preface, precept, demurrer, prescription , 1. The act of prescribing, directing,
Additional info about word: PRESCRIPTION
A direction of a remedy or of remedies for a disease, and the manner of using them; a medical recipe; also, a prescribed remedy. (more info) inscription, preface, precept, demurrer, prescription , 1. The act of prescribing, directing, or dictating; direction; precept; also, that which is prescribed.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of PRESCRIPTION)
- Custom
- Manner
- habit
- use
- usage
- fashion
- practice
- prescription
- Routine
- Round
- course
- succession
- order
- rule
- custom
- system
- sequence
- gradation
- rotation
- stereotype
- tenor
- uniformity
- method
- settlement
- regulation
Related words: (words related to PRESCRIPTION)
- STEREOTYPER
One who stereotypes; one who makes stereotype plates, or works in a stereotype foundry. - ROUNDWORM
A nematoid worm. - HABITURE
Habitude. - SYSTEMATIZE
To reduce to system or regular method; to arrange methodically; to methodize; as, to systematize a collection of plants or minerals; to systematize one's work; to systematize one's ideas. Diseases were healed, and buildings erected, before medicine - ROUNDISH
Somewhat round; as, a roundish seed; a roundish figure. -- Round"ish*ness, n. - ROUNDABOUTNESS
The quality of being roundabout; circuitousness. - FASHION-MONGERING
Behaving like a fashion-monger. Shak. - FASHIONED
Having a certain style or fashion; as old-fashioned; new- fashioned. - FASHION-MONGER
One who studies the fashions; a fop; a dandy. Marston. - ROUNDFISH
Any ordinary market fish, exclusive of flounders, sole, halibut, and other flatfishes. A lake whitefish , less compressed than the common species. It is very abundant in British America and Alaska. - HABITED
1. Clothed; arrayed; dressed; as, he was habited like a shepherd. 2. Fixed by habit; accustomed. So habited he was in sobriety. Fuller. 3. Inhabited. Another world, which is habited by the ghosts of men and women. Addison. - ROUND-UP
The act of collecting or gathering together scattered cattle by riding around them and driving them in. - COURSED
1. Hunted; as, a coursed hare. 2. Arranged in courses; as, coursed masonry. - FASHIONABLY
In a fashionable manner. - SETTLEMENT
A disposition of property for the benefit of some person or persons, usually through the medium of trustees, and for the benefit of a wife, children, or other relatives; jointure granted to a wife, or the act of granting it. 2. That which settles, - COURSE
1. The act of moving from one point to another; progress; passage. And when we had finished our course from Tyre, we came to Ptolemais. Acts xxi. 7. 2. THe ground or path traversed; track; way. The same horse also run the round course at Newmarket. - METHOD
Classification; a mode or system of classifying natural objects according to certain common characteristics; as, the method of Theophrastus; the method of Ray; the Linnæan method. Syn. -- Order; system; rule; regularity; way; manner; mode; course; - CUSTOM
Long-established practice, considered as unwritten law, and resting for authority on long consent; usage. See Usage, and Prescription. Note: Usage is a fact. Custom is a law. There can be no custom without usage, though there may be usage without - SYSTEMLESS
Not agreeing with some artificial system of classification. (more info) 1. Being without system. - PRACTICER
1. One who practices, or puts in practice; one who customarily performs certain acts. South. 2. One who exercises a profession; a practitioner. 3. One who uses art or stratagem. B. Jonson. - MISGROUND
To found erroneously. "Misgrounded conceit." Bp. Hall. - INCONSEQUENCE
The quality or state of being inconsequent; want of just or logical inference or argument; inconclusiveness. Bp. Stillingfleet. Strange, that you should not see the inconsequence of your own reasoning! Bp. Hurd. - INHABITATE
To inhabit. - ACCUSTOMARILY
Customarily. - COHABITER
A cohabitant. Hobbes. - UNDERGROUND INSURANCE
Wildcat insurance. - GROUNDWORK
That which forms the foundation or support of anything; the basis; the essential or fundamental part; first principle. Dryden. - INHABITATIVENESS
A tendency or propensity to permanent residence in a place or abode; love of home and country. - PLAYGROUND
A piece of ground used for recreation; as, the playground of a school. - IMBORDER
To furnish or inclose with a border; to form a border of. Milton. - GROUNDEN
p. p. of Grind. Chaucer. - RETROGRADATION
1. The act of retrograding, or moving backward. 2. The state of being retrograde; decline. - ACCUSTOMEDNESS
Habituation. Accustomedness to sin hardens the heart. Bp. Pearce. - BERTILLON SYSTEM
A system for the identification of persons by a physical description based upon anthropometric measurements, notes of markings, deformities, color, impression of thumb lines, etc. - RECOURSEFUL
Having recurring flow and ebb; moving alternately. Drayton.