seponate
English
Etymology
See usage notes.
Verb
seponate (third-person singular simple present seponates, present participle seponating, simple past and past participle seponated)
- (medicine, rare, transitive, nonstandard, chiefly Scandinavian, chiefly in passive) To remove (a medication) from a patient's treatment.
- 1926, Acta Ophthalmologica[1], volume 3, Munksgaard, page 231:
- 16 patients had, according to order, been using myotics all the time before the after-examination. With 10 of those the drops could be seponated.
- 1957, in Annales Paediatriae Fenniae, Volume 3, Issue 2,[2] Duodecim, page 488:
- There was a striking connexion between periods of remission when the thyroid preparation was given, and exacerbations when the drug was seponated.
- 1984, Lars A. Carlson et al., editors, Treatment of Hyperlipoproteinemia[3], Raven Press, →ISBN, page 116:
- Note the prompt increase in cholesterol levels when treatment is seponated or dosage reduced.
Usage notes
- This term does not appear to be used by native English speakers; rather, it is found only in English works by Scandinavian authors, who apparently assume the existence of an English cognate for Norwegian seponere, Swedish seponera, German seponieren, and so on.