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Keyarga sells some potions to Karman, the store owner, who warns him about the girl's fate. After having sex with Freia and Setsuna, Keyarga decides to use himself as bait, transforming into a woman named Keara. At a pub, Blade is enticed by Keara and offers her a drink. Blade transfers a sleeping potion via a kiss and Keara pretends to pass out.
Solcière and her servant Trauuma, who plot to use Pretty Cure tears for a potion, then capture the Cures, taking them to another world. Separated from each other, Cure Miracle comes across the HappinessCharge PreCure! team: Cures Lovely, Princess, Honey and Fortune, while Cure Magical encounters the DokiDoki!
In another nearby village, she provides healing potions to the villagers there to allow recovery. The village chief shows them a hint on where the epidemic's source is coming from, leading to a foggy area where Kaoru uses some hi-tech glasses to help find their way, where they also discover red-eyed animals infected by the epidemic.
The elixir of life (Medieval Latin: elixir vitae), also known as elixir of immortality, is a potion that supposedly grants the drinker eternal life and/or eternal youth. This elixir was also said to cure all diseases. Alchemists in various ages and cultures sought the means of formulating the elixir.
A brown dog-like fairy who is Asumi's fairy partner and the Young Princess of the Healing Garden (ヒーリングガーデンの幼い王女さま, Hīringu Gāden no Osanai Ōjo-sama) [1] She does not speak and barks like a normal dog, but others can use a stethoscope to hear her inner voice. Like Teatine, she can detect when Byogens infect ...
My go-to method for years has been (for two of us): five large eggs, one large yolk, salt and pepper, and a splash of cream. I cook the whisked eggs in butter, over the lowest heat possible on the ...
A potion is a liquid "that contains medicine, ... who sold supposedly magical healing potions and elixirs. [9] During the Great Plague of London in the 17th century, ...
Panacea traditionally had a poultice or potion with which she healed the sick. [citation needed] This brought about the concept of the panacea in medicine, a substance with the alleged property of curing all diseases. The term "panacea" has also come into figurative use as meaning "something used to solve all problems". [3]