No, brompheniramine, pseudoephedrine, and dextromethorphan (often abbreviated as bromphenir-pseudoephed-dm) are not narcotics. They are an antihistamine, a decongestant, and a cough suppressant, respectively. These ingredients are commonly found in over-the-counter cold and allergy medications and do not have the same properties or potential for abuse as narcotics.
In many cases the actual suffix is "-ic" which means "like". Thus patriot-ic is patriot-like andidiot-ic is idiot-like. There are words derived from Greek words ending in -tikon which have been brought into English with the ending -tic such as semiotic or narcotic. Words like patriotic have been assimilated to the Greek model.
No. seroquel is not a narcotic but it is a non-narcotic.No. seroquel is not a narcotic but it is a non-narcotic.
No it is not a narcotic. Clozapine is an antipsychotic.
Ondansetron is not a narcotic
No! It is not a narcotic I exclaimed!
No, nexium is not a narcotic.
No. Celexa is not a narcotic. It has no addictive properties at all.
The IC code is on the actual IC, you can find out its details by searching the IC code on Google.
No it is not narcotic...
The suffix of narcotic is "-otic".
is effexor a narcotic? Narcotic is a Greek word meaning to deaden or numb. Narcotic also means illegal or unlawfully possessed drug. So unless you are getting Effexor illegally no it is not a narcotic.
Nucynta is an opioid pain medication. An opioid is called a narcotic. so Nucynta is a narcotic