Time For Some Drugs
Sci. Abbr.
World Capitals
TV Catchphrases
Organic Chemistry
100

Carbonate of this element is the active ingredient in Tums, which can be used to treat a deficiency of it

Calcium

100

Biologically speaking, it's what the N-A stands for in RNA and DNA

Nucleic acid

100

This Kenyan metropolis outdoes Denver by a few hundred feet in the 'Mile High Capital City Club'

Nairobi

100

Frequently uttered by Stan and Kyle on "South Park": "Oh My God", these three words

They killed Kenny

100

You can breathe easy knowing photosynthesis causes plants to release this gas as a waste product

Oxygen

200

Drugs like Claritin work by reducing the effects of this natural chemical in the body

Histamine

200

sec is short for this trigonometry function

Secant

200

It was the capital of Gran Colombia before it was the capital of (regular) Colombia

Bogota

200

Casting about for a line to go along with snuffing out a torch on "Survivor", executive producer Mark Burnett came up with this one

The tribe has spoken

200

This element's "footprint" is everywhere: by definition, every compound studied by organic chemists contains it

Carbon

300

Before penicillin, bacterial infections were treated with these 5-letter drugs that are still used for eye infections and acne

Sulfa

300

C is short for this unit of electric charge, named for a French physicist

Coulomb

300

This capital of Cambodia is at the junction of the Mekong and the Tonle Sap

Phnom Penh

300

Seinfeld greeted the neighbor played by Wayne Knight with scorn and these two words

Hello, Newman

300

Triglycerides are the most common type of this organic compound; healthy eaters steer clear of the saturated ones

Fats

400

The sedative Diazepam began being sold under this name in 1963; a few years later, it was "mother's little helper"

Valium

400

If you're a web developer, you probably use HTML (hypertext markup language) and CSS, short for this

Cascading Style Sheets

400

It's not just the capital-- it's also one of Morocco's four imperial cities

Rabat

400

"Did I do that?" was this character's mantra on "Family Matters"

Steve Urkel

400

In chemistry, it's the unit of measure equal to 6.02x1023 of anything-- atoms, molecules... even mammals that burrow in your lawn

Mole

500

It's the active ingredient in the "pens" used to treat anaphylaxis

Epinephrine

500

PTX can be short for this condition of air in the pleural space

Pneumothorax

500

Climbing up on Medvednica Hill, I could see this end-of-the-alphabet city's light and pictured its 13th century invasion by Mongols

Zagreb

500

The 1960s series "Lost In Space" gave us this three word catchphrase; it was an episode title of the 2018 reboot

Danger, Will Robinson

500

Chemically speaking, they're molecules with at least one unpaired electron; true to their name, they can be, like, totally reactive

Radicals/ free radicals

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