| ¿µ¹® | official name(=generic name) | ÇÑ±Û | ÀϹݸí |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼³¸í | ¾àÀÇ À̸§À» ºÎ¸¦¶§ ÀϹݸí°ú ÀÌ¿¡ ¹ÝÇÏ´Â »óÇ¥¸í(brand name: trade name)ÀÌ ÀÖ´Ù. ÀϹݸíÀº ¾àÀÇ ¼ººÐ¿¡ µû¶ó ºÙÀÌ´Â À̸§À¸·Î ºñ·Ï »óÇ¥¸íÀº ´Þ¶óµµ ±× ÀϹݸíÀº ¸ðµÎ µ¿ÀÏÇÒ ¼ö ÀÖ´Ù. ¿¹¸¦ µé¾î ampicillin(Ç×»ýÁ¦ÀÇ ÀÏÁ¾)À̶ó´Â ÀÏ¹Ý¸í¿¡ ´ëÇØ °¢ ȸ»ç¿¡¼´Â ¸ðµÎ ÀÌ ¼ººÐ¿¡ µû¶ó ¾àÀ» ¸¸µéÁö¸¸, °íÀ¯ÇÑ Amcill, 0mnipen, Penbritin, Polycillin µîÀÇ °¢±â ´Ù¸¥ »óÇ¥¸¦ ºÙÀÌ°Ô µÈ´Ù. |
||
| DNS | Domain Name System |
|---|---|
| FQDN | Fully Qualified Domain Name |
| NAME Syndrome | Nevi, Atrial myxoma, Myxoid neurofibroma, Ephelides Syndrome |
| BAN | British Approved Name; British Association of Neurologists |
| JAN | Japanese accepted name |
| L -NAME | L -nitro arginine methyl ester |
|---|---|
| L-NAME | L omega-nitro arginine methyl ester |
| -NAME | N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester |
| L-NAME | L-arginine and NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester |
| L-NAME | N(G)-L-Arginine methyl ester |
| generic name | 1. In chemistry, a noun that indicates the class or type of a single compound; e.g., salt, saccharide (sugar), hexose, alcohol, aldehyde, lactone, acid, amine, alkane, steroid, vitamin. "Class" is more appropriate and more often used than is "generic." 2. In the pharmaceutical and commercial fields, a misnomer for nonproprietary name. 3. In the biologic sciences, the first part of the scientific name (Latin binary combination or binomial) of an organism; written with an initial capital letter and in italics. In bacteriology, the species name consists of two parts (comprising one name): the generic name and the specific epithet; in other biologic disciplines, the species name is regarded as being composed of two names: the generic name and the specific name. (05 Mar 2000) |
|---|
| generic | A drug not protected by a trademark. Also, the scientific name as opposed to the proprietary, brand name. (16 Dec 1997) |
|---|---|
| drugs, generic | Drugs whose drug name is not protected by a trademark. They may be manufactured by several companies. (12 Dec 1998) |
| vernacular name | <zoology> The colloquial names of taxa i.e. In any language or form other than that of zoological nomenclature. Have no status in nomenclature. (09 Jan 1998) |
| collective-group name | 1. A name established expressly for a collective group. 2. A name established for a nominal genus or subgenus and later used for a collective group. (09 Jan 1998) |
| compound name | <zoology> One that is formed by the union of two or more basic components, excluding prefixes and suffixes. For example striatoradiatus, novaeguineae, fritzmuelleri, c-album (09 Jan 1998) |
| proprietary name | <pharmacology> The protected brand name or trademark, registered with the U.S. Patent Office, under which a manufacturer markets its product. It is written with a capital initial letter and is often further distinguished by a superscript R in a circle. Compare: generic name, nonproprietary name. Origin: L. Proprietas, ownership (05 Mar 2000) |
| semisystematic name | A name of a chemical of which at least one part is systematic and at least one part is not (i.e., is trivial). For example, calciferol includes the -ol suffix denoting an -OH radical, while calcifer-, which has no systematic meaning, is used only in this word. Cortisone contains the -one suffix, indicating a ketone group, but the rest of the term derives from cortex (adrenal). Hippuric acid (trivial) may be defined as N-benzoylglycine (semitrivial name); benzoyl is systematic for the C6H5-CO-radical, whereas glycine is the trivial name for alpha-aminoacetic (or 2-aminoethanoic, to be completely systematic) acid, and the N signifies that the benzoyl is attached to the nitrogen of glycine; from this, the structure C6H5-CO-NH-CH2-COOH is uniquely defined. Many generic or nonproprietary names of drugs, including USAN names, hormones, etc., are semitrivial in this chemical sense, although often termed trivial names; distinction between trivial and semitrivial is not often made. Synonym: semitrivial name. (05 Mar 2000) |
| semitrivial name | A name of a chemical of which at least one part is systematic and at least one part is not (i.e., is trivial). For example, calciferol includes the -ol suffix denoting an -OH radical, while calcifer-, which has no systematic meaning, is used only in this word. Cortisone contains the -one suffix, indicating a ketone group, but the rest of the term derives from cortex (adrenal). Hippuric acid (trivial) may be defined as N-benzoylglycine (semitrivial name); benzoyl is systematic for the C6H5-CO-radical, whereas glycine is the trivial name for alpha-aminoacetic (or 2-aminoethanoic, to be completely systematic) acid, and the N signifies that the benzoyl is attached to the nitrogen of glycine; from this, the structure C6H5-CO-NH-CH2-COOH is uniquely defined. Many generic or nonproprietary names of drugs, including USAN names, hormones, etc., are semitrivial in this chemical sense, although often termed trivial names; distinction between trivial and semitrivial is not often made. Synonym: semitrivial name. (05 Mar 2000) |
| hybrid name | <zoology> Names given to hybrids are not normally available, as they are individuals, not populations, and hence not taxa. (09 Jan 1998) |
| NAME | Acronym for nevi, atrial myxoma, myxoid neurofibromas, and ephilides. See: NAME syndrome. (05 Mar 2000) |
| name bearing type | <zoology> The type genus, type species, holotype, lectotype, series of syntypes, neotype, type slide, or hapantotype, that provides the objective standard of reference whereby the application of the name of a taxon can be determined. (09 Jan 1998) |
| NAME syndrome | <syndrome> The concurrence of nevi, atrial myxoma, myxoid neurofibromas, and ephilides. (05 Mar 2000) |
| nonproprietary name | A short name (often called a generic name) of a chemical, drug, or other substance that is not subject to trademark (proprietary) rights but is, in contrast to a trivial name, recognised or recommended by government agencies (e.g., Federal Food and Drug Administration) and by quasi-official organizations (e.g., U.S. Adopted Names Council) for general public use. Like a proprietary name, it is almost always a coined designation derived without using set criteria. Compare: trivial name, proprietary name, semisystematic name, systematic name. (05 Mar 2000) |
| systematic name | As applied to chemical substances, a systematic name is composed of specially coined or selected words or syllables, each of which has a precisely defined chemical structural meaning, so that the structure may be derived from the name. Water (trivial name) is hydrogen oxide (systematic). The systematic name of histamine (a semisystematic name) is imidazolethylamine, which indicates that a radical of imidazole replaces one hydrogen atom of ethylamine, which in turn is an ethyl group attached to an amine group. Dimethyl sulfoxide states that two methyl radicals are attached to a sulfur atom that holds an oxygen atom. Carbolic acid (trivial name) or phenol (semisystematic name) are, systematically, phenyl hydroxide or hydroxybenzene. See: semisystematic name. (05 Mar 2000) |
| trade name product | <pharmacology> Trademarked proprietary preparations containing the generic substance. Some foreign trade name products have been selectively included here due to the relative popularity of the generic medication. (17 Mar 1998) |
| generic name |
Go to Top of Document - CONTENTS Generic Name provides the full name to describe an Element Name contained in the DOEInfo database. Example: Element Name: Next_equivalent_increase_date Generic Name: Projected date of next equivalent increase Element Name: Generic_name Table: MetaData Length: 128 Data Type: Character
Ãâó: https://mis.doe.gov/doeinfo/infoTerm.cfm
|
|---|---|
| generic name |
a common name used to identify a drug, as opposed to a brand name used by a particular company (eg, TMP-SMX is the generic name the drug sold as Bactrim or Septra).
Ãâó: www.aegis.com/ni/topics/glossary/g.asp
|
| generic name |
The term "generic name" has three meanings when referring to a drug. First, it may be the chemical name of a drug. Second, it may refer to the chemical makeup of a drug rather than to the advertised brand name. And finally, generic is any drug marketed under its chemical name without advertising. Generic drugs are less expensive than brand-name drugs are chemically identical and meet US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) standards for safety, purity, and effectiveness.
Ãâó: www.providence.org/alaska/tchap/glossary/G.htm
|
| generic name |
The name of a genus. Always a single word (simple or compound), written with a capital initial letter and employed as a noun in the nominative singular
Ãâó: www.entm.purdue.edu/entomology/courses/306/306glos...
|
| generic name |
the commonly-accepted industry name for a type of service. See also brand name. French: nom g??ique.
Ãâó: www.crtc.gc.ca/dcs/eng/glossary.htm
|
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|