1. Nom générique de diverses marchandises qui s'emploient surtout en médecine ou pour la teinture et qui se vendent en droguerie.
2. Synonyme de stupéfiant ou de produit stupéfiant.
ETYM Dutch doop a dipping, from doopen to dip. Related to Dip.
Slang terms for inside information; SYN. poop, skinny, low-down.
1. A thick liquid or pasty preparation.
2. A preparation for giving a desired quality to a substance or surface.
3. Absorbent or adsorbent material used in various manufacturing processes (as the making of dynamite).
ETYM French drogue, prob. from Dutch droog; akin to Eng. dry; thus orig., dry substance, hers, plants, or wares. Related to Dry.
Any of a range of substances, natural or synthetic, administered to humans and animals as therapeutic agents: to diagnose, prevent, or treat disease, or to assist recovery from injury. Traditionally many drugs were obtained from plants or animals; some minerals also had medicinal value. Today, increasing numbers of drugs are synthesized in the laboratory.
Drugs are administered in various ways, including: orally, by injection, as a lotion or ointment, as a pessary, by inhalation, and by transdermal patch.
Drugs generally have three names. The first is the chemical name, which is often too complicated to remember. Every new drug, if it is likely to have a medical application, is given an approved (generic or non-proprietary) name, for example, by the British Pharmacopoeia Commission. Such a drug may have BP (British Pharmacopoeia); BPC (British Pharmaceutical Codex); or USP (United States Pharmacopoeia) after its name. Drugs may be marketed under their approved name, but more often they are known by the proprietary, or trade, names given to them by the manufacturing company which initially takes out a patent on their synthesis. One compound may have a large number of proprietary names. (See also drug, generic).
Something that is used as a medicine or narcotic.