inapothecary's usually they sell things such as coins touched by people who are from the royal family, hand drills to drill holes in your head and more. These were sold because in the medieval times many people thought that the most bizzar things could cure things such as head aches, but now we have the scientists and medication to help us with pains, aches and infections.
An apothecary is a person who prepared and sold medicines and drugs. In the past, they were considered the equivalent of a modern-day pharmacist.
potions to cure illnesses in the olden days. usually using some kind of herbs or animals part.
paint, paint brushes, window glass,
With money. The apothecary was poor and would do anything for some spare ducats.
The apothecary says this when he sells Romeo poison.
I went to the apothecary for some aspirin.
Apothecary does not have a root word.
What we here in the USA would call a "pharmacy", people in the United Kingdom would call the "chemist", and most people in Europe would call an "apothecary". These people stock, prepare, and sell medicines. Before about 1900, the apothecary would create the "medicines" from herbs, leaves, oils, and essences. These concoctions were often useless or actively harmful.
I went to the nearest apothecary for an anesthetic for my toothache.
What are the key components of the apothecary system?
Yes there was apothecary women in colonial times!!
Generally, the monks were the ones who were the apothecary's .
An apothecary is, historically, a person who makes and provides drugs or medicines.
Because the apothecary said that he would sell the poison to Romeo only because he needed the money so badly (selling poison is illegal in Mantua). Therefore, the apothecary's poverty (state/situation) is forcing him to take Romeo's offer, not because he wants to disobey the law. Romeo is paying the apothecary's need, not his want.
(Here's two different sentences. In one it is used as a noun, in the other an adjective.) "The sick colonist visited the apothecary." "I decorated my bathroom with apothecary jars."