From google
“Some people think that Rx means prescription. In a way it does. However, Rx is the abbreviation for the Latin word meaning "recipe." The abbreviations used in prescriptions are derived from Latin terms.
“Apr 7, 2000“
Or is it
Is rx papi like Mazda rx?
Pap don’t drive no Mazda Rx
He drives 4-O’s like Jason Statham
Pull up to the light like “Who’s racin?”
Rev the engine and burn the pavement
Never seen Rx as prescription in talk or on paper n i live off medication due to health problems lol
go listen to his music he shout RX all the time
R X K
R X K
R X K
R X K K K
I like that one better
Pap don’t drive no Mazda Rx
He drives 4-O’s like Jason Statham
Pull up to the light like “Who’s racin?”
Rev the engine and burn the pavement
Oh yeah we learning in here now
The "R" in "Rx" stands for the Latin word recipe, meaning "take," and the first doctor to use "Rx" used it as a verb with the same meaning, "Rx two aspirin" being equivalent to today's "Take two aspirin." (The word recipe had had the same function from the 13th through the 17th centuries.) Those two letters were a 19th-century take on a 16th-century symbol, the letter R with a line through its slanted leg-the line signaling that the "R" is functioning as an abbreviation. It wasn't till the early 20th century that "Rx" came to be used as the noun we know today. As for the noun "recipe," it followed the same trajectory, referring to a medical prescription for about 100 years before it developed its connection with cooking in the early 17th century.
prescription papi