I believe that drug use has always been a problem, but was not looked at that way in the past because it was believed to be normal. Now days its looked at as a problem because there are more people on the earth which means more people to use the drugs. Which also means more people getting hurt from the drug or the drug users.
get a drug test, if you have to keep getting them.
Nope, not serious, unless he gets them for very long periods of time. Generally, if you think there is a problem it never hurts to go to the vet.
no
serious is not a verb so it doesn't have a past tense
The past tense of drug is drugged.
The past tense of "serious" is "seriously."
Codeine and marijuana. However, there are basic drug tests to test for everything but a lot of them tend to be quite specific. If you are trying to get past an employer and police drug test however I would not take the risk that there test wont be able to test for Codeine and marijuana. As Codeine is one of the metabolites of drugs that are considered much more serious such as morphine and heroin.
Legislative intent is a statement of justification (by legislators) for passing a bill. If the bill relates to a wide-spread public policy, the legislative intent may be written into the statute the bill is amending. For example, if there is a serious drug problem among teenagers in a particular state, the legislature might write something like: The Legislature finds that there is wide-spread drug abuse among teenagers in this state. In fact, there has been a 40% increase in juvenile drug cases in the past three years. To address this problem, X statute is being amended to provide special procedures in juvenile drug cases.
When your relationship is more serious, you should tell them. It is something that happened in the past and you got over it. That is an accomplishment, not a fault. They will understand that.
The correct usage depends on whether you need the adjective "serious" or the adverb "seriously". "More" is an adverb that modifies the adjective or adverb.Correct use of "more serious": Brian was a more serious student than his younger brother.Correct use of "more seriously": He took the stage and spoke to the crowd more seriously than he had at any time during the past three months.
don't do drugs.
Yes