Synonym: appointed, decreed, official, ordained, positive. Similar words: prescribe, inscribed, describe, proscribed, prescription, scribe, ascribe, inscribe. Meaning: [prɪ'skraɪbd] adj. 1. set down as a rule or guide 2. fixed or established especially by order or command 3. conforming to set usage, procedure, or discipline 4. formally laid down or imposed.
Random good picture Not show
(151) The person who prescribed the medicine may have had homoeopathic experience but was not using homoeopathy in this case.
(152) Thus, these drugs should not be prescribed to patients with pre-existing peripheral neuropathy.
(153) He shaved and showered, was dressed before the breakfast tray arrived at the prescribed nine o'clock.
(154) Antibiotics were also prescribed for 48 hours prior to the operation to reduce the bacteria normally present in the bowel.
(155) He prescribed a diet, which included these tiny gourmet tins of prime lean meat in savoury jelly.
(156) No hypnotic was prescribed in view of the risk of a further overdose.
(157) The sentencing powers of magistrates are subject to certain general statutory restrictions in addition to the maximum penalties prescribed for each individual offence.
(158) Boxers taking medication prescribed by a physician must report it.
(159) After her delivery the symptoms did not decrease and a maintenance dose of oral prednisolone, 12.5 mg/day, was also prescribed.
(160) I've prescribed steroids freely in the past without thinking about the immunosuppressant effect.
(161) Only two patients had been prescribed aids or appliances to improve their technique.
(162) First, ask if there are other medications or treatment alternatives to the prescribed medication.
(163) Is the prescribed medication or treatment safe, and what are the likely side-effects?
(164) I prescribed a kaolin antacid mixture to be given night and morning and left the house in a confident frame of mind.
(165) A doctor was called out and he diagnosed some kind of virus and prescribed a course of antibiotics.
(166) If you find a prescribed medication is disrupting your sleep,[sentencedict.com] the effects may be temporary.
(167) Members of each stratum were not expected to deviate from certain prescribed occupations.
(168) After 10 to 20 minutes she said that Mr H was mentally ill and would become worse without the medicines she prescribed.
(169) Frequently, companies adopt standard forms of Articles of Association which are prescribed under the Companies Act 1985.
(170) Because of the risk of potential toxicity, patients have to be carefully screened so that the drug is not inappropriately prescribed.
(171) Also, older people are often treated by several doctors, who may not always know what other drugs have been prescribed.
(172) Standard periods will be prescribed for different types of business.
(173) Every coin in those peasants' purses bore the royal monogram and title prescribed by the king.
(174) The same applied if antibiotics were prescribed, or a referral to a specialty, usually orthopaedics, was required.
(175) The roles and responsibilities of each member of the tripartite system are prescribed by the 1964 Act.
(176) Further, these prescribed medications prevent emotional maturation through inhibiting the capacity to feel emotions and deal with them appropriately.
(177) The pattern of self-poisoning with prescribed drugs largely reflects general prescribing patterns of psychotropic medication.
(177) Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress every day!
(178) He prescribed a painkiller and suggested she keep busy, then he shooed her away and chided her for malingering.
(179) A statutory demand is one of the statutorily prescribed prerequisites to obtaining remedies afforded to creditors by a bankruptcy order.
(180) Thalidomide, the drug prescribed in the Fifties for morning sickness, is the most infamous example.
More similar words: prescribe, inscribed, describe, proscribed, prescription, scribe, ascribe, inscribe, subscribe, proscribe, subscriber, subscribe to, transcribe, circumscribe, indescribable, nondescript, description, preschool, prescient, prescience, presciently, bribe, tribe, briber, crib, bribery, diatribe, tribesman, script, scrimmage.