Get to know Carfentanyl better with 2 real example sentences, the meaning.
Carfentanyl in a sentence
Carfentanyl meaning
Alternative spelling of carfentanil.
Using Carfentanyl
- The main meaning on this page is: Alternative spelling of carfentanil.
Context around Carfentanyl
- Average sentence length in these examples: 30.5 words
- Position in the sentence: 0 start, 0 middle, 2 end
- Sentence types: 2 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Carfentanyl
- In this selection, "carfentanyl" usually appears near the end of the sentence. The average example has 30.5 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, cancer stand out and add context to how "carfentanyl" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include fentanyl or carfentanyl or there and terminal cancer carfentanyl is not. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "carfentanyl" sits close to words such as aabc, aacr and aacsb, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with carfentanyl
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
When we look at the numbers, often what we see is the synthetics, fentanyl or carfentanyl or there’s another — norfentanyl. (21 words)
Unlike fentanyl — which is used as an extremely powerful painkiller that was developed as an anesthetic for patients about to undergo surgery and as a painkiller to treat people with terminal cancer — carfentanyl is not approved for use on humans. (40 words)
Unlike fentanyl — which is used as an extremely powerful painkiller that was developed as an anesthetic for patients about to undergo surgery and as a painkiller to treat people with terminal cancer — carfentanyl is not approved for use on humans. (40 words)
When we look at the numbers, often what we see is the synthetics, fentanyl or carfentanyl or there’s another — norfentanyl. (21 words)
Example sentences (2)
Unlike fentanyl — which is used as an extremely powerful painkiller that was developed as an anesthetic for patients about to undergo surgery and as a painkiller to treat people with terminal cancer — carfentanyl is not approved for use on humans.
When we look at the numbers, often what we see is the synthetics, fentanyl or carfentanyl or there’s another — norfentanyl.