apothecary

Etymology
From, from , from , earlier , from , from +  literally "a place where things are put away". .

Noun

 * : a person who sells medicine, especially one who made and sold their own medicines in the medieval or early modern eras.
 * : an apothecary's shop, a drugstore.
 * 1) * 1919, S.A., “Pharmacy in Russia”, in Soviet Russia, volume 1, number 27, page 6:
 * The Russian people as a whole almost revered the apothecary, and they entered it as they would enter a sanctum.
 * 1) * 2001, Audrey Horning, “Archeology and the Science of Discovery”, in Barbara Heath et al., Jamestown Archeological Assessment, U.S. National Parks Service, page 31:
 * Seeds found in a 1630s refuse-filled clay borrow pit, located near an apothecary, illustrate colonistscolonists’ [sic] intense interest in experimenting with the medicinal qualities of New World plants.
 * 1)  A glass jar of the sort once used for storing medicine.
 * 1) * 2001, Audrey Horning, “Archeology and the Science of Discovery”, in Barbara Heath et al., Jamestown Archeological Assessment, U.S. National Parks Service, page 31:
 * Seeds found in a 1630s refuse-filled clay borrow pit, located near an apothecary, illustrate colonistscolonists’ [sic] intense interest in experimenting with the medicinal qualities of New World plants.
 * 1)  A glass jar of the sort once used for storing medicine.
 * 1)  A glass jar of the sort once used for storing medicine.

Translations

 * Marathi: औषधविक्रेता
 * Tamil: அப்போதிக்கரி