As nouns, dose and dosage are synonyms. Dose may also be a verb.
dosage, quantity
No. Dosage is composed of the root dose and the suffix -age.
dot.There is not automatically an adjectival form for any and every noun.If "dose" is to be an adjective, there has to be a noun that it describes - as in, conceptually, "this {object} is , dude!".The only thing I can think of, offhand, is "dosage meter" - a measuring device that measures, particularly, dosage. Conversely, arguably, "dosage" is a different word.In English, failing there being a real word at all, you can make a (dodgy) adjective by adding the suffix "-wise". (E.g. "clockwise" - "in the direction like how a clock goes".) Thus, for instance: "Dose-wise, I think that is okay. However, I am not sure that the treatment is the right one in the first place."
I don't see any difference.
The difference is that there is an extra word
Cannot is correct. Can not is incorrect.
-The difference between there, their, and they're is commonly confused.
no it dose not bcuz it dosent OK
they move backwards
"Difference" means subtraction. for example the "difference" between 9 and 2 is 7.
Difference is a subtraction word. What is the difference between 5 and 2 = 3
English word dose = Menge, Dose,dosieren (verb)German word Dose = can, doset