- mithridat, mithrydate, mitridat, mitridate, mithrydat
- methridat, methridate, metridat, metridate, medridate, methredate
- mythridate
Noun
mithridate (countable and uncountable, plural mithridates)
- (historical, pharmacology) Any of various historical medicine, typically an electuary compounded with various poison, believed to derive from Mithridates VI and to serve as a universal antidote.
1528, Joannes de Mediolano, translated by Thomas Paynell, Regimen Sanitatis Salerni, page 33:
1676, Richard Wiseman, “Of Lepra or Elephantiasis”, in Several Chirurgicall Treatises, London: Printed by E. Flesher and J[ohn] Macock, for R[ichard] Royston […], and B[enjamin] Took […], →OCLC, 1st book (A Treatise of Tumours), page 139:After I had thus evacuated the Plethora, and diſpoſed her body for Mercurialls more operative, I gave her each morning and evening a few grains of Mercur. diaphoret. in a bolus with conſ. lujule and Mithridate [...]
1686, Thomas D'Urfey, Common-wealth of Women, act V, scene ii, line 47:Fools may talk of Mythridate, Cordials, Elixers...
1990, Harold Leo Klawans, Newton's Madness, page 127:What he wanted, in effect, was a universal antidote, which medical science has for years referred to as a mithridate.
- (archaic, figuratively, by extension) Synonym of cure.
- 1587, Angell Day translating Longus as Daphnis and Chloe, sig. C3v:
- The contemplation was a mithridate to a pestered conceipted minde.
1592, John Lyly, Midas..., act IV, scene iv, line 47:That which maketh me most both to sorrow and wonder, is that musick (a methridat for melancholy) should make him mad.
- (obsolete, rare) Ellipsis of mithridate mustard.
Translations
supposed universal antidote against poison