dewormer
English
Etymology
Noun
dewormer (countable and uncountable, plural dewormers)
- Medicine used in deworming an animal.
- 2007 February 4, Jon Mooallem, “The Modern Kennel Conundrum”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 27 February 2021:
- It is one of three whelping houses at the Puppy Haven Kennel, the 1,600-dog compound that Havens has built up over the last 30 years in the outlands north of Madison, Wis. Nearby, an affable elderly couple hosed feces from slats below the cages, and their daughter, another of Havens’s 14 paid employees, swiftly handled one squeaking pup at a time, issuing dewormer.
- 2022 February 10, Abdul El-Sayed, “Canadian trucker protests are the latest example of Covid-19 absurdity”, in CNN[2], archived from the original on 22 April 2022:
- Whether boarding an airplane with underwear on your face to protest mask requirements, injecting yourself with horse dewormer instead of a safe and effective vaccine or swallowing household disinfectants because the President of the United States unironically suggested that it might help, the pandemic has amplified the frequency and tenor of ridiculous and sometimes alarming behavior.
Translations
medicine used in deworming an animal
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