From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishaspirinas‧pirin /ˈæsprɪn/ ●●○ noun (plural aspirin or aspirins) [countable, uncountable] MDa medicine that reduces pain, inflammation, and fever
Examples from the Corpus
aspirin• So, if you're popping down a daily aspirin, keep the pop music down too.• At my house Jasper kept an electric razor, a toothbrush, and he saw to it that I always had aspirin.• On the other hand, aspirin is safer, cheaper and more readily available than most drugs.• Still, caffeine is not aspirin.• A couple of cookies are as good as a couple of aspirin.• The proportion receiving aspirin within the first 24 h may be substantially lower.• Any patient who has vascular disease should be on long-term aspirin.• Meye etal reported that tight junctions in the canine gastric mucosa were significantly damaged by exposure to aspirin.Origin aspirin (1800-1900) German acetylierte spirsäure type of acid from which aspirin is obtained, from Modern Latin spiraea type of bush from which this acid is obtained