A schedule I drug is one for which a prescription cannot be written, such as heroin, LSD, crack, etc.
A schedule II drug is one which doctors can write prescriptons for, but have a high potential for addiction and abuse, such as Demerol and Morphine. Refills on these drugs are not allowed; you must have a new prescription written each time you get them.
greater potential for addiction
A controlled substance is a drug that is regulated by the government due to its potential for abuse and addiction. Non-controlled substances are drugs that do not have the same level of regulation because they are considered to have a lower risk of abuse and addiction.
corpus is a real substantial thing. Animus is the intention.
please tell me the difference between thickness
Schedule is when something happens and procedure is what gets done.
Schedule 160 is thicker than 80
The difference between schedule 40 and 80 pvc is the wall thickness and schedule 80 is thicker then schedule 40 so the higher the schedule number the thicker the wall of the pipe thus can hold more pressure.
The difference between the freezing and boiling points vary from substance to substance.
a controlled group is like an idea but an experiment that is controlled cannot be changed.
Hydrocodone is an opiate (meaning it's a derivative of opium), I believe. Darvocet is an Opiod, which means it's synthetic and made to chemically mimic the effects (especially painkilling properties) of other opiates. To my knowledge, Hydrocodone is more potent than Darvocet and is a schedule 3 controlled substance-Darvocet is schedule 4. The smaller the number, the higher the abuse potential. Hope that helped.
Annexure provides a list of documents and is a part of schedule and schedule provides the reference and description of the documents
Chemists prefer the expression pure substance.