单词 | dose |
释义 | dosen. 1. Medicine. a. A definite quantity of a medicine or drug given or prescribed to be given at one time. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > [noun] > dose of medicine dosis1543 dose1600 dation1657 prise1683 1600 W. Vaughan Nat. & Artific. Direct. Health (1633) 78 The Dose or quantity is foure or five leaves of it in a cup of Ale. 1608 Bp. T. Morton Preamble Incounter 39 A dos of his Opium. 1808 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 19 248 Small dozes of tincture of digitalis. 1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 441 To call his complaint a fever, and to administer doses of bark. b. A given quantity of X-rays or other ionizing radiation, esp. considered in relation to a person receiving it; a quantity of ionizing radiation received or absorbed at one time or over a specified period (e.g. in radiotherapy or the irradiation of plants); dose rate n. the rate at which the dose is increasing. Also attributive. absorbed dose (or simply dose): the quantity of ionizing radiation absorbed, measured (in rads) by the energy absorbed per unit mass of material; exposure dose: the quantity of ionizing radiation to which anything is exposed or subjected, measured (in roentgens) by the ionization it produces in a given mass of air. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medical treatment > treatment by radiation > [noun] > dose or dosage dosage1893 pastille dose1909 dose1912 split-dose1947 1912 W. J. S. Bythell & A. E. Barclay X-ray Diagnosis & Treatm. 117 Heavy doses may occasionally produce a strong skin reaction. 1918 R. Knox Radiogr. & Radio-therapeutics (ed. 2) ii. 424 An erythema dose is one which causes slight erythema to appear within fifteen to twenty-one days. 1918 R. Knox Radiogr. & Radio-therapeutics (ed. 2) ii. 428 If the total dose is to be administered in several sittings. 1918 R. Knox Radiogr. & Radio-therapeutics (ed. 2) ii. 514 Exposures, with large quantities of radium in well-filtered doses, may be given up to twenty-four hours. 1947 Radiology 49 283/2 Lower dose rates could not be used, as the period of fertility of mice is only eight months. 1947 Radiology 49 352/1 Four dose levels (13, 4·3, 1·15, 0·115r) were empirically chosen. 1950 Britannica Bk. of Year 682/2 Dose, the amount of radio-active contamination received by a person, implement, or other object employed on or used in atomic energy research or utilization. 1955 Bull. Atomic Scientists 213/3 The biological effects of radiation are measured by the dose received, that is, by the energy absorbed by unit volume of the tissue from the radiation. 1956 Nature 17 Mar. 531/1 At very low dose-rates..the radiation times required would be inconveniently long. 1959 Times 7 Dec. (Agric. Suppl.) p. vi/5 Doses of radiation in the range 8,000–10,000 rads have been found to be sufficient for commercially acceptable sprout suppression in potatoes of several varieties. 1963 Clin. Dosimetry (Nat. Bur. Stand. Handbk. 87) 38/2 Numerous names were examined as a replacement for exposure dose, but there were serious objections to any which included the word dose. There appeared to be a minimum of objection to the name exposure and hence this term has been adopted by the [International] Commission [on Radiological Units and Measurements]... The elimination of the term ‘dose’ accomplishes the long-felt desire of the Commission to retain the term dose for one quantity only—the absorbed dose. 1969 New Scientist 24 Apr. 177/1 With high energy X-rays the dose at a depth below the surface is significantly greater than that on the surface skin. 1970 R. Passmore & J. S. Robson Compan. Med. Stud. II. xxxiii. 3/2 Such fall-out is estimated to have resulted in an average yearly dose of 2·4 mrads in the period 1954–9. 2. transferred and figurative. a. A definite quantity or amount of something regarded as analogous in some respect to a medical prescription, or to medicine in use or effect; a definite amount of some ingredient added to wine to give it a special character. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > [noun] > a definite or specified quantity or amount quantitya1325 measurec1384 certainc1386 certainty1431 assignment1519 dosis1543 dose1607 matter1610 quantum1747 volume1812 1607 R. Parker Scholasticall Disc. against Antichrist i. ii. 68 To banish the whole dosse of popishe doctrine. 1664 S. Butler Hudibras: Second Pt. ii. iii. 199 Marri'd his punctual dose of Wives. c1790 J. Willock Voy. diverse parts 55 A sufficient doze of their favorite liquor, whiskey. 1858 C. Merivale Hist. Romans under Empire VI. liii. 152 To repeat and increase daily the dose of flattery. 1894 P. L. Ford Hon. Peter Stirling 150 ‘He snubbed me,’..explained Miss De Voe, smiling..at the thought of treating Peter with a dose of his own medicine. b. An unpleasant experience. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > displeasure > [noun] > unpleasantness > unpleasant experience rencounter1589 rencontre1661 rub1733 dose1847 cold shower1875 murder1878 bummer1967 1847 E. Brontë Wuthering Heights I. iii. 56 You have reason in shutting it up... No one will thank you for a dose in such a den! 1939 H. G. Wells Holy Terror i. ii. 41 Seems he don't like the idea of this new war that's coming... We had a dose. c. a dose of salts: a dose of aperient salts; also transferred and figurative with like: very rapidly. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > rapidity or speed of action or operation > with rapid action [phrase] in hastec1300 on wheelsc1547 like wildfire1699 like magic1783 like a shot1809 a dose of salts1837 1837 Crockett's Almanac 3 I'll go through the Mexicans like a dose of salts. 1953 E. Simon Past Masters ii. iii. 84 She went systematically through the residents, in the phrase of Monro, like a dose of salts. 1961 L. Dobie & R. Sloman Tinker 11 If you think you're getting tired or anything, tell me and we'll be back down that bloody thing like a dose of salts. 1961 P. G. Wodehouse Service with Smile ii. 28 He boxed three years for Oxford... And went through the opposition like a dose of salts. 1968 J. Wainwright Edge of Extinction 31 If we don't hold 'em they'll go through this city like a dose of salts. d. An occurrence of venereal disease. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders of internal organs > venereal disease > [noun] > attack of dose1914 load1937 STD1974 STI1991 1914 Dial. Notes 4 105 Dose, venereal disease. 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. viii. [Lestrygonians] 146 Some chap with a dose burning him. 1952 B. Hamilton So Sad, so Fresh xix. 122 The cream of the joke is, she gave me the worst dose I've ever had. 1968 B. Turner Sex Trap xi. 97 She's riddled with pox. I know four blokes who've copped a dose from her. Draft additions September 2004 dose–response adj. Medicine and Biology relating to, exhibiting, or designating a relationship between the size of a dose and a measure of the response to it; esp. in dose–response curve. ΚΠ 1932 Q. Jrnl. Pharmacy & Pharmacol. 5 263 (caption) The dosage/response relation for rabbits.] 1940 Suppl. Jrnl. Royal Statist. Soc. 7 22 Marks..gave the results of a series of experiments which supplied a standard dose-response curve for use in the interpretation of future tests. 1944 Proc. Royal Soc. B. 132 164 The response of the bovine ovary to single subcutaneous injections of pregnant mares' serum..has been studied... Both time-response and dose-response data were obtained. 1990 Internat. Jrnl. Epidemiol. 19 876/1 A highly preventive effect of ginseng on cancer with a dose-response relationship was observed in humans. 2002 Behavioural Pharmacol. 13 593 Daily pretreatment with corticosterone shifts the ascending limb of the dose-response curve for the acquisition of cocaine self-administration upwards and to the left. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online March 2022). dosev. 1. transitive. To divide into, or administer in, doses. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medical treatment > treatment by medicine or drug > treat with drugs [verb (transitive)] > administer (drugs) dose1733 1733 G. Cheyne Eng. Malady i. xi. 105 Care..in dosing the proper Medicines for such..Disorders. 1749 W. Derham Physico-theol. (ed. 11) I. ii. vi. 58 Some Plants..being esteemed poisonous, which if truly corrected, or exactly dosed, may perhaps prove the most powerful and effectual Medicines yet known. 1758 R. Pultney in Philos. Trans. 1757 (Royal Soc.) 50 74 They knew how to dose it very exactly. 2. a. To administer doses to; to physic. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > medical treatment > treatment by medicine or drug > treat with drugs [verb (transitive)] physicc1400 pharmacize1609 potion1611 dose1654 store1722 draughta1777 1654 E. Gayton Pleasant Notes Don Quixot ii. ii. 39 For the mishap, no other..was to dose it but himselfe. 1692 R. South 12 Serm. I. 401 A bold, self-opinion'd Physician..who shall Dose, and Bleed, and Kill him secundum artem. 1753 G. Washington Jrnl. in Writings (1889) I. 25 They dosed themselves pretty plentifully with it [wine]. 1824 W. Irving Tales of Traveller I. 41 My uncle grew worse and worse, the more dosing and nursing he underwent. b. transferred. To add or apply a dose of something to: see dose n. 2. ΚΠ 1836 J. Hume in Ho. Comm. 24 Mar. The dosing wines liberally with brandies and other spirits. 1884 Fortn. Rev. Dec. 799 This dosing with ammoniates has done more to impoverish agriculture than all the terrors of disease. Derivatives ˈdoser n. one who (or that which) gives a dose: used contemptuously for a physician. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > physician > [noun] physician?c1225 leecherc1374 practiserc1387 doctora1400 flesh-leecha1400 leechman14.. mediciner?a1425 miria1425 M.D.1425 medicine?c1450 practitioner?1543 minister1559 doc1563 artist1565 medicus1570 medicianera1578 Aesculapius1586 Dra1593 pisspot1592 medician1597 physicianer1598 medicinary1599 pisspot1600 velvet-cap1602 healer1611 Galena1616 physiner1616 clyster1621 clyster-pipe1622 hakim1623 medic1625 practicant1630 medico1647 physicker1649 physicster1689 Aesculapian1694 nim-gimmer1699 pill-monger1706 medical man1784 meester1812 medical1823 pill-gilder1824 therapeutist1830 pill1835 pill roller1843 med1851 pill-peddler1855 therapeutic1858 squirt1859 medicine man1866 pill pusher1879 therapist1886 doser1888 internist1894 pill-shooter1911 whitecoat1911 quack1919 vet1925 1888 Poor Nellie 162 Never met one of your dosers yet, who was anything but a quack. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1897; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.1600v.1654 |
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