Sentences with phrase «known as antidote»

Squelch, originally known as Antidote, is a recurring spell in the Dragon Quest series.

Not exact matches

Worryingly, people who overdose on such designer drugs, known collectively as China White, have been said to be less responsive to antidotes now widely carried by first responders.
I know that many folks get carried away with the notion of calling and turn it into some sort of Delphic Oracle experience (see fellow blogger Kevin DeYoung's wonderful book «Just Do Something» as an antidote to this; it should be mandatory reading for anyone who is serious about this).
After the apparent dissolution of normal empirical and relational thought at the hands of F. H. Bradley, and the apparent paradox (as Russell himself complained) that it was now impossible to know anything without first knowing everything, «simplemindedness» must have seemed the only antidote possible for philosophy.
As an antidote to the tragic news that, no, you will never eat regular donuts again; April provides 40 gluten free comfort food recipes that will make even the most frustrated gluten intolerant smile with relief.»
Police hope the decline in deaths continues but McCarthy said naloxone — the overdose antidote, also known as Narcan — is «a logical extension» of the department's drug prevention and enforcement programs.
It's surprising considering that 85 % of students voted Remain in the referendum, Manchester Central saw a 15 % increase in 18 - 24 voters voting for Labour in this year's Snap Election (as many believe that Corbyn and Labour are the antidote to Theresa May's Hard Brexit or No Deal Brexit) and Manchester homes 40,000 students across the city.
Researchers in Massachusetts looked at people who underwent training in using the antidoteknown as naloxone (Narcan, Evzio)-- and found that family members used it in about 20 percent of slightly over 4,000 rescue attempts.
Activated charcoal (AV) is known as the «universal antidote» which when ingested is renowned for its powerful ability to safely draw toxins, pathogens and wastes into its massive surface area, hold them fast, and efficiently remove them from the body right along with the feces during a bowel movement.
However, too many calories from any source overwhelm the system so protein no longer can work as an antidote and the antidote analogy breaks down.
As you know, a regular yoga practice is a perfect antidote to holiday stress.
Worse yet, this unlikely character has been paired oddly with Naomie Harris as a scientist who used to work for the capitalists and knows the antidote that might shrink the animals.
In order to save millions of drug addicts (also known as human beings), she wants the US President (Greenwood) to make illegal drugs legal and taxable before she will release the antidote.
Once that message sank in, Americans would be ready for the antidote: eliminating the public schools they had long known and cherished as the centers of their communities.
But as poetry readers know, its lyrical gifts can be an antidote to many of life's woes, offering calm waters of meditation, razor - sharp cultural critique or a playful celebration of language.
Known as one of the best «off - piste,» or backcountry, skiing areas in the world, the lavish surroundings at the No. 5, three bedroom south, make the perfect antidote to a rambunctious day on the slopes.
Known as one of the best «off - piste,» or backcountry, skiing areas in the world, the lavish surroundings at Valentine 211 make the perfect antidote to a rambunctious day on the slopes.
By the 1930s, Regionalism, along with its ethical cousin Social Realism formed part of a broad movement known as American Scene Painting, which struck a popular chord with many people, not least because it offered a positive antidote to the gloom of The Great Depression which was ravaging the country.
This anti-institutional gauntlet organized by the Bruces, as they are collectively known, challenging the cultural authority ascribed to the Whitney Biennale has been best described by sculptor, professor, and director of the Granoff Center at Brown University Richard Fishman as «the expansive, 400 - plus artist, quasi invitational, slightly guerilla exhibition that seemed to offer an antidote to the walls and silos of the art world.»
I first met Stuart when I co-authored (with Winkler, CJO) a volume of O'Brien's Encyclopaedia for CLB, and came to know him better as a fellow publisher when, as an antidote to law practice, I got involved in Lancaster House.
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