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Have you taken your medicine meaning?
Meaning: If you take your medicine, you accept the consequences of something you have done wrong.
Is it drink or take your medicine?
“Take your medicine” is absolutely correct. “Drink” would only apply to liquid medication, of course. In any event, I would always say “take”, particularly in your example sentence.
Do you take or eat medicine?
There is no simple answer to this question. However, as a general rule you should take medicine on an empty stomach (one hour before eating or 2 hours after). This is because many medicines can be affected by what you eat and when you eat it.
Can you take medicine in the morning?
When timing doesn’t matter In most cases, it’s not important when you take your medicine. For instance, you can take non-drowsy antihistamines for hay fever, or analgesics for pain when you need them. It doesn’t matter if it is morning, noon or night.
Did you take medicine or have you taken medicine?
So you can say in English, ‘did you take your medicine in the morning’ or ‘have you taken your medicine in the morning’, depending if the past tense is intended or the present perfect tense is intended. Either way, with morning only the preposition in is correct.
Where we use drink and take?
When we want someone to drink their medicine, we tell them to ‘take’ the medicine. On the other hand, when we want someone to drink some juice, we say ‘drink’ the juice, etc.. In both the cases we are telling them to drink something.
What is the difference between took and taken?
Took is the simple past tense, whereas taken is the past participle. This means that you can say took on its own, e.g. I took the cake, but you have to have an auxiliary (helping) verb with taken, e.g.
When to use took or had taken?
Generally, the simple past (took) is used to make general statements/single events about the past, while the past perfect (had taken) is used to show a completed action before another, both occurring in the past.
Did you take your medicine This Morning in the past?
To answer your last question, it depends. In your example: Did you take your medicine this morning? you are asking whether someone did something already (in the past), regardless of whether it is still morning or not. So past tense is OK. If you want to keep it in the present, you could say:
When is the best time of day to take your medications?
Some drugs are best used in the morning, others should be taken in the evening or right before going to bed. “Unfortunately, there’s a disconnect between what’s taught to doctors and what we know from chronotherapy research,” says circadian biologist Georgios Paschos of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
Are You taking your medications correctly?
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) estimates that as many as half the people taking medications at any given time are doing so incorrectly. Most of these people are only delaying their own recovery.
Is it better to take levothyroxine in the morning or at night?
Some people find this impractical on a busy morning. More recent research shows, however, that people who take levothyroxine at night get better results ( Archives of Internal Medicine, Dec. 13, 2010 ).