dose









dose


dose [dohs] ExamplesWord Origin See more synonyms for dose on Thesaurus.com noun

  1. a quantity of medicine prescribed to be taken at one time.
  2. a substance, situation, or quantity of anything analogous to medicine, especially of something disagreeable: Failing the exam was a hard dose to swallow.
  3. an amount of sugar added in the production of champagne.
  4. Physics.
    1. Also called absorbed dose.the quantity of ionizing radiation absorbed by a unit mass of matter, especially living tissue: measured in gray or rad.
    2. exposure dose.
  5. Slang. a case of gonorrhea or syphilis.

verb (used with object), dosed, dos·ing.

  1. to administer in or apportion for doses.
  2. to give a dose of medicine to.
  3. to add sugar to (champagne) during production.

verb (used without object), dosed, dos·ing.

  1. to take a dose of medicine.

Origin of dose 1590–1600; earlier dos Late Latin dosis Greek dósis a givingRelated formsdos·er, nounsu·per·dose, nounun·der·dose, nounun·der·dose, verb (used with object), un·der·dosed, un·der·dos·ing.well-dosed, adjective Related Words for dose shot, measurement, application, lot, measure, prescription, quantity, dosage, potion, hit, fix, share, dram, nip, slug, fill, draught, spoonful Examples from the Web for dose Contemporary Examples of dose

  • If laughter is the best medicine, The Comeback made you feel enough pain to need a dose—and then it delivered in spades.

    ‘The Comeback’ Finale: Give Lisa Kudrow All of the Awards

    Kevin Fallon

    December 29, 2014

  • Stop Making Sense is the only current movie that’s a dose of happiness from beginning to end.

    The Stacks: Pauline Kael’s Talking Heads Obsession

    Pauline Kael

    November 22, 2014

  • The “gold standard” dose is 30 minutes of 10,000 lux light, one hour of 5,000 lux light or two hours of 2,500 lux light.

    Fight Seasonal Affective Disorder With This New Tracker

    DailyBurn

    November 7, 2014

  • On Wednesday, anchor Shepard Smith gave Fox News viewers a dose of rationality.

    Breakdancing Brad Pitt, Chainsaw Massacre Prank, and More Viral Videos

    The Daily Beast Video

    October 19, 2014

  • The story gets out that Obama skipped his usual afternoon dose of caffeine heading toward the U.N. meeting.

    Obama, the Coffee Salute, and the Dementia on the Right

    Sally Kohn

    September 25, 2014

  • Historical Examples of dose

  • This cop that found me in a hallway, he says I must have been give a dose of Peter.

    The Spenders

    Harry Leon Wilson

  • It is not strange that when we have swallowed the dose it does little to effect a cure.

    The Conquest of Fear

    Basil King

  • We are to be cured by an excess of the dose that has poisoned us.

    A Treatise on Parents and Children

    George Bernard Shaw

  • Let us by all means give them instead a dose of positive philosophy.

    The Roof of France

    Matilda Betham-Edwards

  • She could not tell the exact time, because, in spite of her efforts, she had ended by falling into a dose.

    L’Assommoir

    Emile Zola

  • British Dictionary definitions for dose dose noun

    1. med a specific quantity of a therapeutic drug or agent taken at any one time or at specified intervals
    2. informal something unpleasant to experiencea dose of influenza
    3. Also called: dosage the total energy of ionizing radiation absorbed by unit mass of material, esp of living tissue; usually measured in grays (SI unit) or rads
    4. Also called: dosage a small amount of syrup added to wine, esp sparkling wine, when the sediment is removed and the bottle is corked
    5. slang a venereal infection, esp gonorrhoea
    6. like a dose of salts very quickly indeed

    verb (tr)

    1. to administer a dose or doses to (someone)
    2. med to give (a therapeutic drug or agent) in appropriate quantities
    3. (often foll by up) to give (someone, esp oneself) drugs, medicine, etc, esp in large quantities
    4. to add syrup to (wine) during bottling

    Derived Formsdoser, nounWord Origin for dose C15: from French, from Late Latin dosis, from Greek: a giving, from didonai to give Word Origin and History for dose n.

    c.1600, from Middle French dose (15c.), from Late Latin dosis, from Greek dosis “a portion prescribed,” literally “a giving,” used by Galen and other Greek physicians to mean an amount of medicine, from stem of didonai “to give” (see date (n.1)). Slang meaning “venereal disease” is from 1914.

    v.

    1650s, from dose (n.). Related: Dosed; dosing.

    dose in Medicine dose [dōs] n.

    1. A specified quantity of a therapeutic agent, such as a drug, prescribed to be taken at one time or at stated intervals.
    2. The amount of radiation administered as therapy to a given site.

    v.

    1. To give or prescribe something, such as medicine, in specified amounts.
    2. To give someone a dose, as of medicine.
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