glycerinated gelatin
Noun: A semi-solid, jelly-like substance created by combining gelatin, glycerin, and water. It is primarily used in pharmacy as a stable, malleable base for medicated ointments and suppositories.
This term is highly specific to pharmaceutical and chemical contexts. It refers to the prepared mixture itself, not its individual components. * The pharmacist used glycerinated gelatin as the base for the medicated suppository. * The formulation required a base of glycerinated gelatin to ensure the ointment remained stable at room temperature.
- As a technical material: In laboratory or industrial settings, glycerinated gelatin may be used beyond pharmaceuticals, for example, as a mounting medium for microscope slides in biology to preserve specimens.
- The tissue sample was preserved in glycerinated gelatin for microscopic analysis.
- Gelatin (noun): A translucent, colorless, flavorless food ingredient derived from collagen, used in food production, photography, and pharmacy. It is a key component of glycerinated gelatin.
- Glycerin (noun): Also called glycerol, a thick, sweet, colorless liquid used in food, pharmaceuticals, and cosmetics. It is a key component of glycerinated gelatin, acting as a humectant and plasticizer.
- Suppository base (noun phrase): A general term for substances like glycerinated gelatin or cocoa butter used to hold medicine for insertion into the body.
- Gelatin-glycerin base: A descriptive synonym.
- Ointment base (specific type): A broader category to which it belongs.
This is a technical compound noun with a single, precise meaning in its field. It does not have idiomatic or figurative uses. The word itself is not typically broken down into phrasal verbs or used in idioms.
- a gelatinous preparation made from gelatin and glycerin and water; used as a base for ointments and suppositories