medicine
medicine — 名詞
1. the science and practice of preventing, diagnosing, and treating disease and inj
醫學
醫療保健與疾病防治的學科
the science and practice of preventing, diagnosing, and treating disease and injury; the study of how to keep people healthy and help them recover when they are sick
Stefan decided to study medicine at the university in Kaohsiung.
Stefan 決定在高雄的大學攻讀醫學。
study medicine — collocation for academic study
Modern medicine has found new ways to treat lung cancer and other diseases.
現代醫學已找到治療肺癌及其他疾病的新方法。
Advances in medicine mean that more children survive serious illnesses today.
醫學的進步意味著如今更多兒童能從重病中存活。
Dr. Okonkwo has practiced medicine in Lagos for over thirty years.
Okonkwo 醫生在拉哥斯行醫已超過三十年。
- healthcare
broader term that includes nursing, public health, and allied professions alongside medicine
- medical science
more formal, emphasises the scientific research rather than clinical practice
- healing
less scientific, more traditional or spiritual connotation
文法句型
study + medicine
practice + medicine
用法筆記
Uncountable in this sense — you cannot say 'a medicine' or 'medicines' when referring to the field or profession. Frequently occurs in academic contexts with 'study', 'practice', 'advances in', and 'modern'.
常見錯誤
2. a substance — such as a pill, syrup, cream, or injection — that people take or u
藥;藥物
用於治療或預防疾病的物質
a substance — such as a pill, syrup, cream, or injection — that people take or use to cure a disease, treat an injury, or relieve symptoms
The nurse gave Tunde a spoonful of medicine for his fever.
護士給了 Tunde 一匙退燒藥。
medicine + for + [symptom] — purpose pattern
Did you remember to take your allergy medicine before breakfast?
你早餐前記得吃過敏藥了嗎?
take + possessive + medicine — daily routine
Liquid medicine often tastes bitter, so children may refuse to swallow it.
藥水通常很苦,所以小孩不願意喝。
Travelers with chronic conditions should pack enough medicine for the whole trip.
有慢性病的旅客應攜帶足夠全程的藥物。
Isabelle keeps her medicine on the counter to help her remember her evening dose.
Isabelle 把她的藥放在流理台上,以提醒自己晚上服用。
- medication
slightly more formal, common in medical settings; interchangeable in most contexts
- drug
broader; includes illegal substances and non-medicinal chemicals; can be misleading outside medical contexts
- remedy
may refer to traditional or home treatments, not only pharmaceutical products
- pill
specific to tablet form; not a synonym for liquid or cream medicine
- poison
a substance that harms rather than heals
文法句型
take + medicine
medicine + for + [illness]
用法筆記
Can be countable ('a medicine', 'different medicines') when referring to specific types or doses. Uncountable ('some medicine', 'a lot of medicine') when talking about the substance generally. 'Take your medicine' is both literal and the source of a common idiom (see Idioms below).