Scope (mouthwash)
Scope is a brand of mouthwash made by Procter & Gamble.[1] It was introduced in 1966, and for many years has been advertised as the purportedly better-tasting alternative to Listerine, the longtime dominant mouthwash product.[2]
Ingredients
The active ingredients of Scope Outlast are cetylpyridinium chloride, domiphen bromide, and denatured alcohol.
Inactive ingredients of Scope Outlast are water, glycerin, polysorbate 80, sodium saccharin, sodium benzoate, benzoic acid, Blue 1, and Yellow 5.[3]
gollark: No, it's x86 assembly to NAND gates.
gollark: The category of Macrons is equivalent to the homotopy category of the category with weak equivalences PSh(C)PSh(C) with the weak equivalences given by W=W = local isomorphisms. The converse is also true: for every left exact functor L:PSh(S)→PSh(S)L : PSh(S) \to PSh(S) (preserving finite limits) which is left adjoint to the inclusion of its image, there is a Grothendieck topology on SS such that the image of LL is the category of Macrons on SS with respect to that topology.
gollark: What if Macron literally LLVM backend?
gollark: It was hilarious.
gollark: We convinced Firecubez that Macron was a real language.
See also
References
- Hodock, Calvin (2007). Why Smart Companies Do Dumb Things. Prometheus Books. pp. 20–21. ISBN 1591025680.
- Klara, Robert (January 17, 2013). "Perspective: The Big Kiss-Off. Scope's prudish days are over". Adweek. Retrieved 2014-05-09.
- "Trib Tested: Scope Outlast Mouthwash". Tribune-Review/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (subscription required). September 14, 2009. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
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