Prescription vs Homily - What's the difference?
prescription | homily | Related terms |
(legal) The act of prescribing a rule, law, etc. .
(legal) A period of time within which a right must be exercised, unless the right is extinguished.
(medicine) A written order, as by a physician or nurse practitioner, for the administration of a medicine or other intervention. See also scrip.
(medicine) The prescription medicine or intervention so prescribed.
(ophthalmology) The formal description of the lens geometry needed for spectacles, etc. .
A piece of advice.
(of a drug, etc. ) only available with a physician or nurse practitioner's written prescription
A sermon, especially concerning a practical matter.
*
A moralizing lecture.
* Byron
A platitude.
As nouns the difference between prescription and homily
is that prescription is the act of prescribing a rule, law, etc. while homily is a sermon, especially concerning a practical matter.As an adjective prescription
is (of a drug, etc.) only available with a physician or nurse practitioner's written prescription.prescription
English
(wikipedia prescription)Alternative forms
* (archaic)Noun
(en noun)- "Jurisdiction to prescribe " is a state's authority to make its laws applicable to certain persons or activities. -- Richard G. Alexander, Iran and Libya Sanctions Act of 1996: Congress exceeds its jurisdiction to prescribe law. Washington and Lee Law Review, 1997.
- The prescription governing the victim’s right to enter a charge shall be interrupted by virtue of section 95 of the Criminal Code.
- The surgeon wrote a prescription for a pain killer and physical therapy.
- The pharmacist gave her a bottle containing her prescription .
- The optician followed the optometrist's prescription for her new eyeglasses.
- "Early to bed and early to rise" is a prescription for a healthy lifestyle.
Adjective
(head)- Many powerful pain killers are prescription drugs in the U.S.
See also
* proscription ---- ==Jèrriais==Noun
(f)homily
English
Noun
(homilies)- As I have heard my father / Deal out in his long homilies .
