apothecary

listen to the pronunciation of apothecary
English - Turkish
(isim) eczacı
{i} eczacı
apothecary's shop
eczane
apothecaries
eczacıların
pharmacist
(isim) eczacı
pharmacist
{i} eczacı

Sen bir eczacı olmalısın. - You should be a pharmacist.

Tom eczacı olmak istiyor. - Tom wants to be pharmacist.

English - English
A drugstore or pharmacy

Seeds found in a 1630s refuse-filled clay borrow pit, located near an apothecary, illustrate colonists sic] intense interest in experimenting with the medicinal qualities of New World plants.

A person who makes and provides/sells drugs and/or medicines

O true Apothecarie!Thy drugs are quicke. Thus with a kiſſe I die.

one who keeps drugs for sale and puts up prescriptions
rendered in the margin and the Revised Version "perfumer," in Ex 30: 25; 37: 29; Eccl 10: 1 The holy oils and ointments were prepared by priests properly qualified for this office The feminine plural form of the Hebrew word is rendered "confectionaries" in 1 Sam 8: 13
{n} a compounder of medicines, one that prepares and sells medicines
a health professional trained in the art of preparing and dispensing drugs
A pharmacist or chemist
pharmacist
– A person who studies the art and science of mixing medicines; also known in modern times as a pharmacist
A drugstore; pharmacy
A person who makes and sells drugs and/or medicines
One who prepares and sells drugs or compounds for medicinal purposes
An apothecary was a person who prepared medicines for people. apothecaries someone who mixed and sold medicines in the past
{i} pharmacist, druggist
chirugion
apothecary's Latin
Barbarous Latin. (1811 Dictionary of Vulgar Tongue)
apothecary's bill
A long bill. (1811 Dictionary of Vulgar Tongue)
talk like an apothecary
To prattle

You do not talk like an apothecary, said Nadir, if you expect that I could exist upon them in the way you suggest..

An apothecary
potecary
An apothecary
pothecary
apothecaries
plural of apothecary
apothecary

    Hyphenation

    a·poth·e·ca·ry

    Turkish pronunciation

    ıpäthıkeri

    Pronunciation

    /əˈpäᴛʜəˌkerē/ /əˈpɑːθəˌkɛriː/

    Etymology

    [ &-'pä-th&-"ker-E ] (noun.) 14th century. From Old French apotecaire, from Latin apothecarius (“storekeeper”) Latin apotheca (“repository, storehouse, warehouse, in Medieval Latin shop, store”) Ancient Greek ἀποθήκη (apothēkē, “a repository, storehouse”) ἀποτίθημι (apotithēmi, “to put away”) ἀπό (apo, “away”) + τίθημι (tithēmi, “to put”).
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