prescription
English
Alternative forms
- præscription (archaic)
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French, from Old French prescripcion, from Latin praescriptio.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pɹəˈskɹɪpʃən/, /pɝˈskɹɪpʃən/
Noun
prescription (countable and uncountable, plural prescriptions)
- (law)
- The act of prescribing a rule, law, etc..
- "Jurisdiction to prescribe" is a state's authority to make its laws applicable to certain persons or activities. -- Richard G. Alexander, Iran and Libya Sanctions Act of 1996: Congress exceeds its jurisdiction to prescribe law. Washington and Lee Law Review, 1997.
- Also called extinctive prescription or liberative prescription. A time period within which a right must be exercised, otherwise it will be extinguished.
- Also called acquisitive prescription. A time period after which a person who has, in the role of an owner, uninterruptedly, peacefully, and publicly possessed another's property acquires the property. The described process is known as acquisition by prescription and adverse possession.
- The act of prescribing a rule, law, etc..
- (medicine, pharmacy) A written order, as by a physician or nurse practitioner, for the administration of a medicine or other intervention. See also scrip.
- The surgeon wrote a prescription for a pain killer and physical therapy.
- (medicine) The prescription medicine or intervention so prescribed.
- The pharmacist gave her a bottle containing her prescription.
- (ophthalmology) The formal description of the lens geometry needed for spectacles, etc..
- The optician followed the optometrist's prescription for her new eyeglasses.
- (linguistics) The act or practice of laying down norms of language usage, as opposed to description, i.e. recording and describing actual usage.
- (linguistics) An instance of a prescriptive pronouncement.
- A plan or procedure to obtain a given end result; a recipe.
- "Early to bed and early to rise" is a prescription for a healthy lifestyle.
Synonyms
- forescript
- (medicine): ℞, Rx
- (a plan or procedure): recipe
Related terms
Translations
the act of prescribing a rule or law
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extinctive or liberative prescription
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usucapion, acquisitive prescription
written order for the administration of a medicine
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the prescribed medicine
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formal description of the lens geometry
the act or practice of laying down norms of language usage
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prescriptive pronouncement
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plan or procedure to obtain a given end result
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Translations to be checked
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Adjective
prescription (not comparable)
- (of a drug, etc.) only available with a physician or nurse practitioner's written prescription
- Many powerful pain killers are prescription drugs in the U.S.
Translations
available with prescription
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French
Etymology
From Old French prescripcion, borrowed from Latin praescriptio, praescriptionem.
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Norman
Etymology
From Old French prescripcion, borrowed from Latin praescriptio, praescriptionem.
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