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- to remove the sacred character of
- transfer (a building) from sacred to secular use. (secularism)
- the act of removing a religious blessing from something that had been previously consecrated. (deconsecration or secularization)
Reversal of coagulation or flocculation, i.e., the dispersion of aggregates to form a stable colloidal suspension or emulsion.
Pharmaceutical preparation that releases the drug(s) at a time other than promptly after administration.
Process that occurs when the vapor pressure of the saturated aqueous solution of a substance is less than the vapor pressure of water in the ambient air.
Deposit of a drug in a body created by injection or by a similar mode of introduction to form a source of slow release.
Property, which serves as basis for the process whereby surfactants are used for the removal of foreign matter from surfaces (including dirt from clothes or body surfaces).
Surfactant (or a mixture containing one or more surfactants) having cleaning properties in dilute solutions (soaps are surfactants and detergents) .
Dosage form in which the active ingredient is insoluble in the carrier; includes aerosols (solids or liquids in gas), suspensions (solids in liquids), emulsions (liquids in liquids), and foams (gas in liquid), or ointments/creams (solid in solid or in semi-solid, or liquid in solid).
Formulation in which individual doses of a granulated dosage form are separated (e.g., gelatin capsules).
Powder formulation in which individual doses of a powdered dosage form are separately wrapped (e.g., sachets, envelopes, or gelatin capsules).
Property, which serves as basis for the process whereby surfactants are used for the removal of foreign matter from surfaces (including dirt from clothes or body surfaces).
See also detergents, solubilizing, surface-active agent, surfactant.
Surfactant (or a mixture containing one or more surfactants) having cleaning properties in dilute solutions (soaps are surfactants and detergents) .
Dosage form in which the active ingredient is insoluble in the carrier; includes aerosols (solids or liquids in gas), suspensions (solids in liquids), emulsions (liquids in liquids), and foams (gas in liquid), or ointments/creams (solid in solid or in semi-solid, or liquid in solid).
Formulation in which individual doses of a granulated dosage form are separated (e.g., gelatin capsules).
Powder formulation in which individual doses of a powdered dosage form are separately wrapped (e.g., sachets, envelopes, or gelatin capsules).
Formulated preparation of molecules/drugs that are rarely if ever suitable for administration to patients without additives.
Biologically active substance, which when biodistributed in the body is expected to modify one or more of its functions.
Sophisticated dosage form, which, by its construction, is able to modify/control the availability of the drug substance to the body by temporal or spatial considerations.
phase of the growth curve at which the number of dying cells exceeds the number of new cells formed
the preferred host organism for a parasite, in which the parasite reaches maturity and may reproduce sexually
redundancy in the genetic code because a given amino acid is encoded by more than one nucleotide triplet codon
release of the contents of mast cell granules in response to the cross-linking of IgE molecules on the cell surface with allergen molecules
chemical reaction in which monomer molecules bind end to end in a process that results in the formation of water molecules as a byproduct
protein that has lost its secondary and tertiary structures (and quaternary structure, if applicable) without the loss of its primary structure