Axolotl My Time Has Come To Burn I Invoke The Ancient Power That I May Return, A-X-O-L-O-T-L my time has come to burn i invoke the ancient power that i may return, 1.08 MB, 00:47, 441,539, Jesus the Gamer1000, 2021-04-10T00:01:36.000000Z, 19, MY TIME HAS COME TO BURN by 20percentcooldash on DeviantArt, 20percentcooldash.deviantart.com, 862 x 927, png, burn come deviantart, 20, axolotl-my-time-has-come-to-burn-i-invoke-the-ancient-power-that-i-may-return, KAMPION
The answer is no, because the expired poison loses its potency. In theory, the expired poisons become more harmful when taken in large doses. If you want to make sure a poison doesn’t have this potential, make sure you have the expiration date on your medicine before you purchase it. This way, you can avoid being in danger of the expired.
An organic poison will lose its toxicity all together in few years but there are a few inorganic poisons that become more toxic but are slow. So let's deal with organic poisons first! Many organic poisons like herbicides and insecticides break down over time, this means that after they expire they will have to be used in a larger amount to be. For example most organic poisons such as common herbicides and insecticides tend to break down, meaning a larger dose is required. They will eventually lose their toxicity but it will take a very long time. Some organic poisons, however, break down into even more toxic substances. These usually have a very short expiration date. When something expires, let's take food and drug for instance. Some of their key ingredients brake down thus becoming harmful, but in poison the reverse is the case.
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