50 Verbs to Use for the Word prescription

When Mary rejoined him, she asked for pen and paper, wrote a prescription, and requested that Beaumaroy's man should take it to the chemist's.

When they assign the real cause, which is undoubtedly connected with the improper gratification of some of the appetites, in one way or another, it is seldom that the patient has self-command enough to follow his prescription of temperance or abstinence.

At Ulva he had appeared in a new character, having given us a good prescription for a cold.

He took the prescriptions, went out into the street.

His clothes plead prescription, and whether they or his body are more rotten is a question.

"Continue the prescriptions you have now, Mrs. Raines.

WILDER, RUSSELL M. A primer for diabetic patients; a brief outline of the treatment of diabetes with diet and insulin, including directions and charts for the use of physicians in planning diet prescriptions.

He turns round on his heels and scribbles out a great many prescriptions, but his skill is not worth a toadstool.

In any case we cannot examine a lady by force or prevent her from getting a prescription until one knows it to be dangerous.

They have been exchanging prescriptions.

He would have tried a prescription of sleeping all night on wet grass under a upas tree, if such a remedy for rheumatism had come from Her.

I sold goods in a store and seemed to know the stocks; I worked two weeks in a telegraph office and discovered I knew the code perfectly; I've shod horses for a country blacksmith, wired a house for electric lights and compounded prescriptions in a drug store.

The student smiled bitterly, and turned to his work of making up the morning prescriptions.

He says he sent no prescription.

He began to practise, at least, honestly, for he began upon himself; and his first essay was a prelude to his future success, for having laid aside all the prescriptions of his physicians, and all the applications of his surgeons, he at last, by tormenting the part with salt and urine, effected a cure.

The physician also called and left another prescription, and encouraged the child to hope for benefit from it.

The fond parents have lost the prescription, And I murmured; "No doubt, the old breed has died out, At least such is my honest conviction." In the horrible slums which form the foul homes Of the rag-covered dames of the city, I saw wrinkled hags, all wrapped in old rags, Whose appearance excited but pity.

Husbands are like invalids, each needs a special prescription, according to his ailment.

Frequently, on the strength of their own medical opinions, they will neglect the prescriptions; frequently they harass a patient about his confession, when a calm state of mind is indispensable for his recovery.

When this is done his duty is ended; and whether the patient obeys the prescription and lives, or neglects it and dies, the physician feels exonerated from all responsibility.

Henry the Fourth said Paris was well worth a mass; so say I that the peace of those nearest is worth a mass; people of my class, as a rule, observe religious prescriptions, and I should protest against the outward symbols only in such a case if I could find something more conclusive to say than "I do not know."

] I have known many ladies who, having once obtained a "blue pill" prescription from a physician, gave and took it as a common aperient two or three times a weekwith what effect may be supposed.

We all walked to the door, and ventured to oppose the doctor's prescription, suggesting that the copious evacuations he had already experienced, might make bleeding useless, if not dangerous.

In 1750 the legislature ordered his prescription published for the benefit of the public, and the Charleston journal which printed it found its copies exhausted by the demand.

But what he should be writing at that time and place one cannot imagine: more reasonably might he be called a physician preparing a prescription.

50 Verbs to Use for the Word  prescription