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briantrumpet
Or vice versa. I think Tylenol itself is in the spotlight because the Gibbons in charge referred to it specifically.

I sense a lawsuit coming for that reason alone.

Yes, that was partly behind my question (though I'm still curious why the generic term is still relatively rare... maybe just linguistic laziness).
 

First Aspect

Über Member
Yes, that was partly behind my question (though I'm still curious why the generic term is still relatively rare... maybe just linguistic laziness).
Tylenol is easy to slur if you are suffering from age related cognitive decline.
 

C R

Guru
Yes, that was partly behind my question (though I'm still curious why the generic term is still relatively rare... maybe just linguistic laziness).

The generic name in the US is acetaminophen, which is probably more of a mouthful than paracetamol.
 

First Aspect

Über Member
Currently reading... the terribly-named 'Britcard'....

https://takes.jamesomalley.co.uk/p/britcard

UKard would be better.
 

matticus

Legendary Member
The generic name in the US is acetaminophen, which is probably more of a mouthful than paracetamol.

... and the main reason that Brits are happy with the word paracetamol is the unending (and underpaid) work by christmas cracker joke writers.
 
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briantrumpet
... and the main reason that Brits are happy with the word paracetamol is the unending (and underpaid) work by christmas cracker joke writers.

It's also very good for teaching how musical quintuplets go.

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