-
substances such as
iodine and
mercurochrome can also be
turned into
tinctures.
Tinctures are
often made of a
combination of
ethyl alcohol and
water as solvents...
-
Tinctures are the colours, metals, and furs used in heraldry. Nine
tinctures are in
common use: two metals, or (gold or yellow) and
argent (silver or white);...
- of
tincture (and also on the
solvent used) it can have a
specific m****/volume
ratio or a
specific therapeutic agents content.
Cannabis tinctures are...
-
Tincture of iodine,
iodine tincture, or weak
iodine solution is an antiseptic. It is
usually 2 to 3%
elemental iodine,
along with pot****ium
iodide or...
- "Dangerous
Mixups Between Opium Tincture and Paregoric". FDA.
Retrieved 2010-11-30. "More
Confusion Between Opium Tinctures".
Institute for Safe Medication...
-
Tincture of
benzoin is a
pungent solution of
benzoin resin in ethanol. A
similar preparation called Friar's
Balsam or
Compound Benzoin Tincture contains...
- "proper", are
generally exempt from the rule of
tincture.
Speculation about a rule
regarding the use of
tinctures first appeared in the
Argentaye tract, a heraldic...
- (/ɔːʁ/;
French for "gold") is the
tincture of gold and,
together with
argent (silver),
belongs to the
class of
light tinctures called "metals". In engravings...
-
British heraldry,
sable (/ˈseɪbəl/ ) is the
tincture equivalent to black. It is one of the five dark
tinctures called colours.
Sable is portra**** in heraldic...
- Warburg's
tincture was a
pharmaceutical drug, now obsolete. It was
invented in 1834 by Dr. Carl Warburg. Warburg's
tincture was well
known in the Victorian...