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Is there a difference between "pill" and "tablet?
Jul 23, 2021 6:54 PM
Answers · 8
1
Pill is more the American word whereas tablet is more common in Ireland and England
July 23, 2021
1
Pill is a general term and tablet is specific. Tablet is usually a round compressed powder. For example: Soda can mean a variety of beverages and Coca-Cola is specific to what soda. Hope that helps.
July 23, 2021
1
Pill and tablet are used almost interchangeably when it comes to medicine. However, they both have other uses too. Like a tablet is an iPad or one made by Samsung. Also we use pill in certain expressions like “It’s a tough pill to swallow” and you can’t replace pill with tablet.
July 24, 2021
1
If you are referring to medicine, they mean the same.
July 23, 2021
1
"Pill" is the general term for medicines that are swallowed (and aren't liquids). Tablets are one of several physical formats that pills can be. This website shows photos: https://dentagama.com/news/what-s-the-difference-between-pills-capsules-tablets-caplets-and-chewables The photos don't quite line up with the descriptions. Photo #1: Pills (a mixture of capsules, tablets, etc.) Photo #2: Capsules Photo #3: Softgels (a type of capsule) Photos #4 and #5: Tablets Photo #6: Chewables (there isn't a photo of the caplets)
July 23, 2021
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