different between botulin vs botox
botulin
English
Etymology
From German Botulin, from Latin botulus (“sausage”).
Noun
botulin (usually uncountable, plural botulins)
- An extremely potent nerve toxin produced by the anaerobic bacteria Clostridium botulinum. Ingesting botulin results in the serious medical condition of botulism.
Related terms
- Botox
Translations
Anagrams
- boultin, built on
botulin From the web:
- what botulinum toxins
- what botulinum cook
- botulinum what is it used for
- what does botulism do
- botulinum what causes
- what does botulinum toxin do
- what is botulinum toxin injections
- what is botulinum toxin type a
botox
English
Noun
botox (uncountable)
- Alternative letter-case form of Botox
Verb
botox (third-person singular simple present botoxes, present participle botoxing, simple past and past participle botoxed)
- Alternative letter-case form of Botox
Finnish
Noun
botox
- Botox
Declension
French
Etymology
Genericized trademark.
Noun
botox m (uncountable)
- Botox
Derived terms
- botoxer
Spanish
Noun
botox m (uncountable)
- Botox
botox From the web:
- what botox does
- what botox can do
- what botox made of
- what botox do
- what botox lasts the longest
- what botox looks like
- what botox means
- what botox do i need
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- botulin vs botox
- ichneumia vs ichneumon
- ichnogram vs ichneumon
- ichnology vs ichneumon
- cheeseburger vs burger
- desolator vs desolater
- surfing vs surfer
- surfboard vs surfer
- protuberance vs protrusion
- ignostic vs agnosticism
- gnosticism vs agnosticism
- gnostic vs agnosticism
- nip vs nipperkin
- robotic vs roboticist
- robotics vs roboticist
- gynophobic vs gynophobia
- lexicon vs lexiconophilist
- lexiconophilist vs lexiconophilia
- lexicon vs lexiconophilia
- glossary vs glossophilia