- an amount of a medicine or a drug that is taken once, or regularly over a period of time
- a high/low/lethal dose
- Repeat the dose after 12 hours if necessary.
- Take a single dose at bedtime to help you sleep.
- I always take my daily dose of vitamin C.
Extra ExamplesTopics Healthcarec1- The nurse will administer the correct dose.
- a strong dose of painkillers
- patients who receive high doses of this drug
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- high
- large
- massive
- …
- get
- receive
- take
- …
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- (informal) an amount of something
- A dose of flu kept me off work.
- Workers at the nuclear plant were exposed to high doses of radiation.
- I can cope with her in small doses (= for short amounts of time).
- The film also contains a hefty dose of comedy.
Word Originlate Middle English: from French, via late Latin from Greek dosis ‘gift’, from didonai ‘give’.
Idioms
See dose in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee dose in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic Englishlike a dose of salts
- (British English, old-fashioned, informal) very fast and easily
- He got through the housework like a dose of salts.
a taste/dose of your own medicine
- the same bad treatment that you have given to others
- Let the bully have a taste of his own medicine.
Check pronunciation:
dose