Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
keti
The doctor gave me a receipt/prescription for drugs
which id right?
31 janv. 2015 15:03
Réponses · 8
2
The doctor gave me a PRESCRIPTION.
I took it to the pharmacy, got the medicine, paid the bill, and the pharmacist gave me a RECEIPT.
Da dah !
31 janvier 2015
2
You get a prescription when you go to the doctors.
31 janvier 2015
2
"Prescription" is correct. "Receipt" is the piece of paper you get from a store to show what you bought. This can be confusing, because in some language (like German) the word for a prescription is "das Rezept," which sounds like "receipt."
31 janvier 2015
1
ALWAYS "prescription." NEVER "receipt."
Sometimes, informally, a prescription is called a "script." And sometimes it's referred to by the abbreviation "Rx."
In U.S. English there is an OUTDATED meaning of the word "receipt" to mean a COOKING recipe. I see that ahdictionary.org gives it as the fourth meaning for "receipt." It also says that "receipt" is from a medieval Latin word "receta" which means BOTH a medical prescription AND money received. So the history of the word "receipt" is tangled.
31 janvier 2015
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keti
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Géorgien, Russe
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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