capsule
noun /ˈkæpsjuːl/
/ˈkæpsl/, /ˈkæpsuːl/
- a small container that has a measured amount of a medicine inside and that dissolves (= becomes part of a liquid) when you swallow it (= make it go down your throat into your stomach)
- The medicine can be taken in tablet or capsule form.
- Take two 30ml capsules a day.
WordfinderTopics Social issuesc1- administer
- capsule
- dispense
- dose
- ill
- inhaler
- medicine
- medication
- pharmacy
- placebo
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- gelatin
- cyanide
- fish oil
- …
- swallow
- take
- contain something
- a small plastic container with a substance or liquid inside
- To avoid capture, he swallowed a cyanide capsule.
- capsules containing a poisonous drug
- (also space capsule)the part of a spacecraft in which people travel and that often separates from the main rocket
- the cramped conditions of a space capsule
- (specialist) a shell or container for seeds or eggs in some plants and animals see also time capsule
Word Originlate Middle English (in the general sense ‘small container’): via French from Latin capsula, diminutive of capsa related to capere ‘to hold’.