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excipient
[ ik-sip-ee-uhnt ]
noun
, Pharmacology.
- a pharmacologically inert, adhesive substance, as honey, syrup, or gum arabic, used to bind the contents of a pill or tablet.
excipient
/ ɪkˈsɪpɪənt /
noun
- a substance, such as sugar or gum, used to prepare a drug or drugs in a form suitable for administration
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Word History and Origins
Origin of excipient1
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Word History and Origins
Origin of excipient1
C18: from Latin excipiēns excepting, from excipere to except
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Example Sentences
A pharmaceutical preparation, in which glycerin is employed as the excipient.
From Project Gutenberg
The sugar of milk, about 10 per cent., or 1⁄2 grain per pill, no doubt is simply an excipient.
From Project Gutenberg
For an excipient in manipulating a pill mass which do you prefer—the magnesia carbonate or the pulverised glycerrhiza radix?
From Project Gutenberg
Excipient, ek-sip′i-ent, n. a substance mixed with a medicine to give it consistence, or used as a vehicle for its administration.
From Project Gutenberg
An excipient for medicinal agents when they are to be administered in the form of bolus.
From Project Gutenberg
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