| A | B |
| Isolation | Keeping an animal separate from others. |
| Contagious | Disease that can spread from animal to animal. |
| Noncontagious | Disease that cannot spread from animal to animal. |
| Parasite | Pest that lives on or in another animal. |
| Vaccination | Shot given to prevent a disease. |
| Healthy | Animal with shiny coat, bright eyes, normal eating habits. |
| Unhealthy | Animal that has a snotty nose, is not eating normally, glassy eyes. |
| 30 days | Isolation period for new animals. |
| Pasture rotation | Moving animals to a different pasture so that the life cycle of a parasite is broken. |
| Balling gun | Used to administer pills to animals. |
| Vat | Medicate water is put into this so an animal can walk through it. |
| Powders | Drugs that are mixed with food or water. |
| Infusion | Using a blunt needle to indject drugs into the teat canal. |
| Paste | Substance placed on the back of an animal's tongue. |
| Liquid | Form of a drug that is used in drenching. |
| Intravaneous | Injecting a drug into a vein. |
| Intraperitoneal | Injecting a drug into the abdominal cavity. |
| Intradermal | Injecting a drug between the layers of skin. |
| Intraruminal | Injecting a drug into the rumen of an animal. |
| Subcutaneous | Injecting a drug under the skin. |
| Intramuscular | Injecting a drug into the muscle of an animal. |
| Rectum | Proper location to take an animal's temperature. |
| Immune | Not affected by a disease organism. |
| Veterinarian | Animal doctor. |
| Interal parasites | Flukes, tapeworms, protazoans. |
| External parasites | Flies, ticks, mites. |
| Withdrawl time | Amount of time that it takes for a drug to leave an animal's body. |