Clofabosin: Difference between revisions

m
korean uses -gi and german uses the infinitive here
m (korean uses -gi and german uses the infinitive here)
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[[{{PAGENAME}}/Names|clofabastilin (Names)]]<br/>
[[{{PAGENAME}}/Names|clofabastilin (Names)]]<br/>
[[{{PAGENAME}}/Periodic table|letrocasan (Periodic table)]]<br/>
[[{{PAGENAME}}/Periodic table|letrocasan (Periodic table)]]<br/>
[[{{PAGENAME}}/Clofabosin|cefspirine clofabosib conamab!]]
[[{{PAGENAME}}/Clofabosin|cefspirine clofabosib conacin]]


'''{{PAGENAME}}''' or '''Clofabian''' (English /kloʊˈfæbəsɪn/ ''kloh-FAB-ə-sin''; {{PAGENAME}}: ƎΠΔꙞΛỺΔᖵꞰⱵΔLꝨИ ''clo·fabo·serotin'' /'klofaboseɾotin/ 'AUG-river-language', ''clofaboluxedan'' /'klofaboluksedan/ or simply ƎΠΔꙞΛỺΔᖵꝨИ ''clofabosin'' /[[Media:Clofab-Clofabosin.ogg|'klofabosin]]/ 'Clofabian [thing]') is a conlang inspired by drug generic names (international nonproprietary names, such as ''sertraline'' for Zoloft). It seeks to answer the question "What if drug names were a language?"
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' or '''Clofabian''' (English /kloʊˈfæbəsɪn/ ''kloh-FAB-ə-sin''; {{PAGENAME}}: ƎΠΔꙞΛỺΔᖵꞰⱵΔLꝨИ ''clo·fabo·serotin'' /'klofaboseɾotin/ 'AUG-river-language', ''clofaboluxedan'' /'klofaboluksedan/ or simply ƎΠΔꙞΛỺΔᖵꝨИ ''clofabosin'' /[[Media:Clofab-Clofabosin.ogg|'klofabosin]]/ 'Clofabian [thing]') is a conlang inspired by drug generic names (international nonproprietary names, such as ''sertraline'' for Zoloft). It seeks to answer the question "What if drug names were a language?"
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