Search for crossword answers and clues
A medicine promoting expectoration
Answer for the clue "A medicine promoting expectoration ", 11 letters:
expectorant
Alternative clues for the word expectorant
Word definitions for expectorant in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a medicine promoting expectoration [syn: expectorator ]
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Expectorant \Ex*pec"to*rant\, a. [L. expectorans, p. pr. of expectorare to drive from the breast: cf. F. expectorant.] (Med.) Tending to facilitate expectoration or to promote discharges of mucus, etc., from the lungs or throat. -- n. An expectorant medicine. ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. Causing or assisting the expulsion of phlegm. n. An agent or drug used to cause or induce the expulsion of phlegm from the lungs.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
in medicine, 1782, from Latin expectorantem (nominative expectorans ), present participle of expectorare (see expectorate ). From 1811 as an adjective.
Usage examples of expectorant.
The root is expectorant, antiscorbutic, and, if taken at all freely, emetic.
The bulb, consisting of several combined cloves, is stimulating, antispasmodic, expectorant, and diuretic.
Expectorants are medicines which modify the character of the secretions of the bronchial tubes, and promote their discharge.
Sanguinaria root is chiefly used as an expectorant for chronic bronchitis and as a local application in chronic eczema, specially when secondary to varicose ulcers.
The dose is 2 to 1 fluid drachm, but it is, as stated, chiefly used as an adjuvant rather than for its slightly laxative and expectorant qualities, though used as a gargle, it will relieve sore throat.
A direct emmenagogue, a tonic in dyspepsia, an expectorant in the absence of feverish symptoms, a stimulant to the mucous tissues, a stomachic carminative, exciting appetite and the flow of gastric juice, and an astringent wash.
Cistus Creticus, or European Rock Rose, the only other plant of the order used in medicine, yields the gum resin Ladanum or Labdanum, a natural exudation valued as a stimulant expectorant and emmenagogue.
It is a stimulant to mucous membranes, and in chronic bronchitis is used as an expectorant.
It has sudorific, tonic and expectorant properties, and is considered a good remedy for whooping cough (for which, indeed, it has been regarded as a specific) and all affections of the lungs.