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Answer for the clue "Bitter medicine ", 10 letters:
asafoetida

Alternative clues for the word asafoetida

Word definitions for asafoetida in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
alternative spelling of asafetida (q.v.); also see oe .

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Asafetida \As`a*fet"i*da\, Asafoetida \As`a*f[oe]t"i*da\, n. The fetid gum resin or inspissated juice of a large umbelliferous plant ( Ferula asaf[oe]tida ) of Persia and the East Indies. It is used in medicine as an antispasmodic. [1913 Webster] ||

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A resinous gum from the stem and roots of a wild fennel ((taxlink Ferula asafoetida species noshow=1)), having a strong, unpleasant smell, with culinary and medical uses. (from 14th c.)

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. the brownish gum resin of various plants; has strong taste and odor; formerly used as an antispasmodic [syn: asafetida ]

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
'''Asafoetida ''' is the dried latex (gum oleoresin ) exuded from the rhizome or tap root of several species of Ferula , a perennial herb that grows tall. The species is native to the deserts of Iran and mountains of Afghanistan and is mainly cultivated ...

Usage examples of asafoetida.

Graham, a small and vivacious gentleman of advanced years who was seated next to me, was wearijg a bag of camphor and asafoetida about his neck, to the evewatering discomfort of the rest of the coach.

He had brought a lot of chicken feathers, and dried apples, and leaf tobacco, and rags, and old shoes, and sulphur, and asafoetida, and one thing or another.

By the time she was forty she had become so much addicted to invalidism that unless some attractive entertainment was offered her she spent the better part of her days reclining gracefully upon a sofa, with a poor relation in attendance, and a table beside her crowded with bottles and phials which contained Cinnamon Water, Valerian, Asafoetida Drops, Camphorated Spirits of Lavender, and any other paregoric or restorative recommended to her by her friends or by the maker’s advertizement.

By the time she was forty she had become so much addicted to invalidism that unless some attractive entertainment was offered her she spent the better part of her days reclining gracefully upon a sofa, with a poor relation in attendance, and a table beside her crowded with bottles and phials which contained Cinnamon Water, Valerian, Asafoetida Drops, Camphorated Spirits of Lavender, and any other paregoric or restorative recommended to her by her friends or by the maker’.