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View synonyms for prescription

prescription

[pri-skrip-shuhn]

noun

  1. Medicine/Medical.

    1. a direction, usually written, by the physician to the pharmacist for the preparation and use of a medicine or remedy.

    2. the medicine prescribed.

      Take this prescription three times a day.

  2. an act of prescribing.

  3. that which is prescribed.

  4. Law.

    1. Also called positive prescriptiona long or immemorial use of some right with respect to a thing so as to give a right to continue such use.

    2. Also called positive prescriptionthe process of acquiring rights by uninterrupted assertion of the right over a long period of time.

    3. Also called negative prescriptionthe loss of rights to legal remedy due to the limitation of time within which an action can be taken.



adjective

  1. (of drugs) sold only upon medical prescription; ethical.

prescription

/ prɪˈskrɪpʃən /

noun

    1. written instructions from a physician, dentist, etc, to a pharmacist stating the form, dosage strength, etc, of a drug to be issued to a specific patient

    2. the drug or remedy prescribed

  1. (modifier) (of drugs) available legally only with a doctor's prescription

    1. written instructions from an optician specifying the lenses needed to correct defects of vision

    2. ( as modifier )

      prescription glasses

  2. the act of prescribing

  3. something that is prescribed

  4. a long established custom or a claim based on one

  5. law

    1. the uninterrupted possession of property over a stated period of time, after which a right or title is acquired ( positive prescription )

    2. the barring of adverse claims to property, etc, after a specified period of time has elapsed, allowing the possessor to acquire title ( negative prescription )

    3. the right or title acquired in either of these ways

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of prescription1

1250–1300; Middle English < Medieval Latin praescrīptiōn- (stem of praescrīptiō ) legal possession (of property), law, order, literally, a writing before, hence, a heading on a document. See prescript, -ion
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Word History and Origins

Origin of prescription1

C14: from legal Latin praescriptiō an order, prescription; see prescribe
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Often Gail looks like she’s frowning, but it’s just that she has poor vision and is straining to see through her prescription lenses.

Colorado, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania took steps this week so that people wouldn’t have to get prescriptions to get their COVID-19 vaccine at a pharmacy.

That assumed contradiction mirrored Suede’s own sensibility, which resisted tidy prescriptions of what working-class representation should look like.

The deal does not affect the price the NHS pays, as the service has negotiated its own heavily-discounted rate for those getting the drug on prescription.

From BBC

Zou had also repeatedly searched online for information around the sleeping drug triazolam, which is a banned substance in the UK but available on prescription in China, according to evidence shown at his trial.

From BBC

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prescriptibleprescriptive