Although cocaine is extremely psychologically addictive, as well as chemically addictive, it is not physically addictive. There are no physical withdrawal symptoms, like there are with alcohol or opiates.
Both alcohol and opiates (opium, heroin, morphine, oxycodone, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, fentanyl, Suboxone, etc.) are physically addictive. As far as I know, they are the only drugs that are physically addictive. Amphetamines, methamphetamines and cocaine are extremely psychologically addictive, as well as chemically addictive, but not physically addictive. Ecstasy also has a fairly high potential for psychological and chemical addiction, but it is not as addictive as speed, meth, or coke. Hallucinogens (LSD, marijuana, salvia, peyote, mescaline) are neither chemically addictive nor physically addictive. They can be psychologically addictive, though.
They are considered to be physically addictive (as opposed to chemically addictive or psychologically addictive).Note that drugs that are physically addictive (alcohol and opiates) are also extremely chemically and psychologically addictive as well. But physical addiction trumps those two. Physical addiction means you get violently ill, and can even die, if you suddenly stop taking the drug. That is not true of chemical and psychological addiction.
Marijuana is not physically addictive, and their for it does not contain an "addictive ingredient"
Ethyl alcohol (C6H5OH) is the addictive substance.
All alcohol is addictive.
Not physically, but slightly mentally. This means that if you smoke every day for a year and stop, you wont really feel much physically. Mentally it depends why you were using it. For example, if you used it as a crutch socially, it might be slightly mentally addictive. In general though marijuana is not addictive, physically or mentally.
Yes, heroin is an opiate and is physically addictive.
Do you mean psychologically or PHYSICALLY addictive
Yes
Yes, Tobbaco is way more addictive than alcohol.
no..it isn't.