Things in a Medicine Cabinet with O
Yes! A common first-aid item for cuts and rashes.
Often kept as mineral or baby oil for skin care.
Acid-reducer medicine; often kept at home.
Yes—like mineral or baby oils in the cabinet.
Generic term for pills/syrups taken by mouth
Omega-3 fish oil supplement; often in cabinets.
Vague, but could be expired pills/meds in there
Prescription medication; could be kept at home.
Ointments are common for cuts, rashes, burns
Oral gel for mouth ulcers/teething fits well here
General term for non‑prescription meds at home
Leftover meds people forget to throw away
Chewable vitamin C tablets often orange
Flavored cold/cough syrup, common at home
Thermometer used in mouth to check fever
Oral‑B is a toothpaste brand, bathroom staple
Antinausea prescription, often kept for crises
Past meds saved “just in case”, very common
Generic tablet shape, fits many stored meds
- oral rinse
Non‑specific, but fits typical cabinet tablets
Colored toothbrush, often sits by the cabinet
Sweet orange‑flavor medicine for kids’ colds
General term for medicine pills taken by mouth, common in cabinet.
Birth control pills taken orally, often kept in bathroom.
Same as birth control pills, stored with personal meds.
Used bandages can be kept before throwing away, fits loosely.
Oral rehydration salts, common for dehydration treatment.
Vitamin C supplement tablets or gummies, often stored there.
Unspecified medicine in pill form, reasonable cabinet item.
Vague, but clearly a medicine kept in the cabinet.
Mouth rinse solution, like antiseptic oral wash.
Branded toothbrush, very commonly in bathroom cabinet.
Eye drops used for eye issues, often in cabinet or fridge.
Contact lenses or similar corrective lenses, stored there.
Eye/optic drops kept for eye irritation or dryness.
Could be left there after use, cabinet item.
Old brush often repurposed for cleaning teeth gear.
Small device to check blood oxygen at home.
Multiple open bottles still count as cabinet stuff.
Insect repellent spray often stored in bathroom.
Shape ok; still specific pills in the cabinet.
Flavored syrup/tablets, common kids’ medicine.
Generic term for solid medicines, fits well.
Could be pills like Fosamax, kept for bone health.
Vague, but could be vitamin C or pain tablets.
Likely means oral ointment/gel kept for mouth issues.
Often kept for ear wax, skin, or makeup removal.
Hormone tablets or patches often kept there.
Las palabras en la lista Things in a Medicine Cabinet with O provienen de jugadores del juego de palabras Juego de ¡Basta!.