Dictionary
bromide
noun
A binary compound of bromine and some other element or radical.
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The word "bromide" is correct and usable in written English.
Generally, it refers to a dull, trite saying or platitude, often used when someone is being clichéd, or overly obvious. For example: "He was so unoriginal that all his compliments were little more than bromides."
Exact(60)
He was administered with a triple lethal injection of pentobarbital, pancuronium bromide and potassium chloride, and at 11.08pm he was pronounced dead.
Many believe their tea is dosed with bromide to keep them impotent and therefore passive.
Then a salty solution, commonly containing lithium bromide, absorbs the refrigerant vapours.
Her veins were flooded first with sodium thiopental to knock her unconscious, then with pancuronium bromide, a strong muscle relaxant that caused her diaphragm and lungs to collapse, and finally a dose of potassium chloride, which stopped her heart.One consequence of Ms Tucker's death may be to make the death penalty gender-blind.
AChEis are found in pesticides that were used to protect soldiers against sand flies and other insects, and in the pyridostigmine bromide pills given to soldiers as part of a pre-treatment against nerve agents.
This is followed by pancuronium bromide, which paralyses the muscles and blocks breathing, but leaves nerve and brain functions intact.
Democrats tend to turn to bromide leftist solutions, whether a higher minimum wage or another rise in tax rates on the rich.
The following day the prime minister, Gordon Brown joined in: "We do apologise to all those people who have suffered," he told Parliament, adding the usual bromide that it "should never be allowed to happen again".This local difficulty has gone national mainly because people suspect that those terrible hospital managers were made worse by the pressure to meet government targets.
That has been overcome by adding emulsifying agents such as cetrimonium bromide (originally developed as an antiseptic) to the mix.The second problem is which particles to use.
When Clayton Lockett, a convicted murder in Oklahoma, was given a cocktail of potassium chloride, midazolam and vecuronium bromide in April 2014, he writhed and groaned in pain, dying from a heart attack 43 minutes later.
Some doctors suspect the process might be reversible by using drugs, like N-phenacylthiazolium bromide, that selectively cleave abnormal bonds while leaving normal ones alone.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com