Theres a mythological story abt it..
The Greek god Horus had a fight protecting someone..
He turned into an Eagle for the fight and incurred a scar..
After he was given medical care it healed, but the eye formed a sort of R and the scar crossed the R.
2006-08-21 20:54:20
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answer #1
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answered by Keeper of Sins 3
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2016-05-28 09:26:59
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answer #2
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answered by David 3
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The symbol Rx is derived from the major lines in the symbol of the Eye of Horus. Horus was an Egyptian god, the god of Nekhen, a village in Egypt, and god of the sky, of light, and of goodness. He was the son of Isis, the nature goddess, and Osiris, the god of the underworld. Osiris was murdered by his evil brother Seth, the god of darkness and evil. Horus sought to avenge his father’s death by challenging his uncle Seth to a fight. Seth cut out Horus’s eye, but Thoth, a god associated with wisdom and compassion, magically restored the eye. Horus did defeat Seth, finally. Horus’s eye, also called the wadjet eye, became a symbol for health. The Egyptians considered it a symbol of good and restored health.
The symbol was passed along through the ages. As William Osler wrote in 1910, “In a cursive form it is found in mediaeval translations of the works of Ptolemy the astrologer, as the sign of the planet Jupiter. As such it was placed upon horoscopes and upon formula containing drugs made for administration to the body, so that the harmful properties of these drugs might be removed under the influence of the lucky planet.”
There is another theory of Rx’s origin. In that version, Rx is an abbreviation for the Latin word recipere, which means “take” or “take thus.” Long ago, this would not have been a direction to a patient but to a pharmacist, preceding the physician’s “recipe” for preparing a medication.
That may be, but the shape of the symbol is a strong argument in favor of the Eye of Horus as its origin.
If you look closely at the major lines of the eye of Horus, you can see the elements of the symbol Rx.
2006-08-21 21:34:53
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answer #3
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answered by jackal 2
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Rx means 'take thou' the following medicine in the name of the God for fast recovery. That is a Roman symbolic word for the prescrition what a doctor administers for the cure of particular disease.
2006-08-22 03:23:19
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answer #4
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answered by SRIRANGAM G 4
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Rx.- (Roman term seeking God grace for faster recovery)
This means that the doctor is prescribing medicine with in the name of Allmighty for quick recovery.
2006-08-21 20:42:12
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Rx signifies "you take"
2006-08-21 20:49:43
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answer #6
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answered by Mayank Maheshwari 2
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A prescription for medicine or a medical appliance
2006-08-23 00:20:04
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answer #7
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answered by softcare4you 2
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Mythologically it does mean to get better.
But some doctors use it as a shortform for Ranbaxy.
2006-08-25 03:46:56
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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in christianity x refers to christ (eg. we use X-mas instead of christmas) .and in this case Rx means Refer to christ
(for patients health).
2006-08-24 09:42:29
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answer #9
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answered by joyful 1
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Normally it represents Renbexy.
2006-08-21 20:37:54
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answer #10
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answered by Anil M 1
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