This will depend heavily on the type of practice the veterinarian is in. Most small animal veterinarians will either wear business casual (polos and slacks) or scrubs, each plus or minus a white lab coat. Large animal vets tend to wear business casual underneath coveralls, which are changed after every farm visit. Equine vets also tend to wear business casual.
There are also veterinarians in the uniformed services who wear their military uniforms daily, as well as veterinarians in the federal government who wear either business casual, business professional or (in meat plants) white shirts and white pants that are easily cleaned.
therapist eye veterinarian professor
If they are working with biological samples (blood, feces, urine, etc.) they should be as a protection for the veterinarian.
A doctor that treats animals is called a veterinarian.
The Veterinarian's Oath is the formal solemn declaration of the responsibilities and duties of a veterinarian. It is administered to all graduates of veterinary medical schools during a ceremony called the Oath and Hooding (veterinary graduates are granted a doctoral degree, which also gives them the right to wear a hood in academic regalia). The entire text of the Oath can be found at the link below.
I would start with an internet search for "veterinarian in scrubs" - most veterinarians, particularly small animal veterinarians, will wear scrubs similar to human physicians during surgery. An exception to this would be a large animal veterinarian performing surgery on the farm, where he/she may be wearing a surgical gown over coveralls and jeans.
Only under a Veterinarian's care. It is a potent drug and can cause weird side effects if too much given. It goes straight to the brain and settles there. It takes a fairly long time to wear off. It should ONLY be given by a Veterinarian.
Vegetarian rhymes with veterinarian.
veterinarian is not well respected among doctors. But a veterinarian knows animal's value.
"[v]et" is an abbreviation for "veterinarian" so, yes, you must be a veterinarian to be a vet.
"Veterinarian" is the original, and more proper, term; "vet" is an abbreviation of veterinarian.
the math classes you have to take to be veterinarian is the number of classes you have to take to be a veterinarian.
No - a veterinarian is a veterinarian regardless of the school they trained at. The pay rate is mostly dependent upon the type of practice, the experience and competence of the veterinarian and the geographic location where the veterinarian is working at.