Similar words: place, replace, in place, displace, misplace, placenta, holy place, complacent. Meaning: [plə'sɪːbəʊ] n. 1. an innocuous or inert medication; given as a pacifier or to the control group in experiments on the efficacy of a drug 2. (Roman Catholic Church) vespers of the office for the dead.
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151. Participants took either 200 milligrams or 400 milligrams of Celebrex, or a placebo, twice a day, for three years.
152. For drug companies, the placebo effect can pose an obstacle to profits--if their medications fail to outperform placebos in clinical trials, they won't get approved by the FDA.
153. The roots of both please and placebo are the same and the American Heritage Dictionary takes them back to an Indo-European root plak that meant "to be flat."
154. Children were randomly provided with either a high-energy, high-protein supplement — atole — or a placebo drink, at specific ages between 0 and 7.
155. Surprisingly, codeine wasn't much better than placebo for suppressing cough in this study.
156. But there was no difference in the magnitude of symptom score improvement between placebo and saw palmetto.
More similar words: place, replace, in place, displace, misplace, placenta, holy place, complacent, placement, out of place, workplace, take place, in place of, complacency, marketplace, replacement, polling place, displacement, irreplaceable, take the place of, in the first place, advance booking, glace, palace, solace, placid, lacerate, shoelace, populace, necklace.