Dose in a sentence as a noun

Instead what they are being given is math in a different dose. And trust me at that age, they don't really like doing that.

13 years old is old enough to take a dose of reality. Science isn't about people's feelings.

If not, let’s put the egos aside, take an extra dose of tolerance and work towards a common goal.

Toxicity as a concept is entirely defined by dose. Bleach is not toxic if you take a small enough dose.

Recent polling plus a good dose of randomization, perhaps. You just hope and pray that your test data never leaks out onto a live feed.

But it all hinges on a 100 ug dose of *** purchased anonymously from Silk Road? How can the OP be sure that the 100 micrograms was pure and accurate?

They were kind and caring people, but they could do nothing but dose their patients with morphine and watch them die. Kindness is nothing but a particular sort of shortsightedness.

\n \n -- Phase 1 "are designed to determine two things: \n dose and dose-limiting side effects" ... \n not efficacy of the drug.

I'm assuming you've got a healthy dose of social anxiety, like most introverts. Wear opinionated tee-shirts that make you feel judged.

Dose in a sentence as a verb

Government loves to really up the public with the us vs them rhetoric so they definitely deserve a dose of their own medicine.

The combination of extreme fear and a heavy dose of Ativan was unlike anything I have ever experienced. When I'm afraid of things, I like to intellectualize.

A healthy dose of realism would help the author along, as would taking the attention-whoring down a notch or two. I spun into a soulless depression--working by day, working by night And now the author is in his manic phase, which will also pass.

So a single dose treatment is a very interesting alternative. The only problem is, MM is extremely resilient, and the cells are everywhere.

We divided up responsibilities so 'I looked outward, and [my spouse] looked inward', meaning that I spent my time making sure that the relevant referrals happened, that medications were administered on time and on dose, and so on. My wife looked inwards towards our daughter, making sure she was fed, entertained, and comfortable.

V=CWnjqeB7Mk8 Currently, the race to improvement is about speed and lower radiation dose. The newest scanners can take hundreds of 2D slices in a single rotation of less than a second and reconstruct the image with a huge variety of algorithms accounting for body part, patient size, etc. that all allow for lower dose and noise resulting in better diagnostic quality.

Have a dose of snark: You crackpot tinfoil hat-wearing kooks imagine all sorts of bizarro world stuff: the Bildeburgers, Skull and Bones, One-world elite conspiracies straight from the imagination of Dan Brown. I mean, how crazy do you have to be to think that every prosecutor in the US is conspiring with the DEA and the NSA, and that this has been going on for years without anyone noticing?

Who's actually checking that, say, the vitamin A palmitate coming from a supplier actually contains the dose requested, and additionally that it contains no other contaminates? The supplement world is like the wild west as far as this goes. And as attracted as I am to a meal replacement like this, the worry about getting accidentally dosed with high levels of arsenic or lead from a shitty supplier really concerns me.

Quote Examples using Dose

You get a much higher dose of radiation from the flight. Backscatter is set up so that the majority of the energy is deposited in your skin. The problem comes from the fact that most of the data we've collected is with X-rays that deposit their energy evenly throughout your body's volume. The heuristics based on that data erroneously suggest that skin is one of the least cancer prone tissues. However, we know on the basis of microbiology that this isn't the case. It's only because the skin constitues a small fraction of the absorption cross section of the entire body that biases the numbers this way. This is a "spherical cow" assumption applied by self-interested bureaucrats. Such an oversight wouldn't be allowed in a PhD thesis defense. Why is it allowed when applied to the health and well being of hundreds of millions of people? Yes, the dose is low, but the geometry of the delivery is radically different.

Anonymous

Dose definitions

noun

a measured portion of medicine taken at any one time

See also: dosage

noun

the quantity of an active agent (substance or radiation) taken in or absorbed at any one time

See also: dosage

noun

a communicable infection transmitted by sexual intercourse or genital contact

noun

street name for lysergic acid diethylamide

verb

treat with an agent; add (an agent) to; "The ray dosed the paint"

verb

administer a drug to; "They drugged the kidnapped tourist"

See also: drug