Definición, Significado, Sinónimos & Anagramas | Palabra Inglés CHEMIST


CHEMIST

Definiciones de CHEMIST

  1. Químico.
  2. Famacéutico.

3

2

Número de letras

7

Es palíndromo

No

16
CH
CHE
EM
EMI
HE
HEM
IS
IST
MI
MIS

7

39

237

505
CE
CEI
CEM
CES
CET
CH
CHE

Ejemplos de uso de CHEMIST en una oración

  • A chemist (from Greek chēm(ía) alchemy; replacing chymist from Medieval Latin alchemist) is a graduated scientist trained in the study of chemistry, or an officially enrolled student in the field.
  • Catherine Grace "Cady" Coleman (born December 14, 1960) is an American chemist, engineer, former United States Air Force colonel, and retired NASA astronaut.
  • It was invented by the Swedish chemist and engineer Alfred Nobel in Geesthacht, Northern Germany, and was patented in 1867.
  • In 1922, chemist William Draper Harkins proposed the name micri-erg as a convenient unit to measure the surface energy of molecules in surface chemistry.
  • Discovered by the French chemist Paul-Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran in 1875, gallium is in group 13 of the periodic table and is similar to the other metals of the group (aluminium, indium, and thallium).
  • The element was discovered by the French chemist Bernard Courtois in 1811 and was named two years later by Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac, after the Ancient Greek , meaning 'violet'.
  • Iridium was discovered in 1803 in the acid-insoluble residues of platinum ores by the English chemist Smithson Tennant.
  • Lutetium was independently discovered in 1907 by French scientist Georges Urbain, Austrian mineralogist Baron Carl Auer von Welsbach, and American chemist Charles James.
  • This law is also known as Dalton's Law, named after John Dalton, the chemist who first expressed it.
  • Named after Joseph Lister, who pioneered antiseptic surgery at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary in Scotland, Listerine was developed in 1879 by Joseph Lawrence, a chemist in St.
  • Thatcher studied chemistry at Somerville College, Oxford, and worked briefly as a research chemist before becoming a barrister.
  • He studied chemistry under Henry Edward Armstrong, an English chemist whose interests were primarily in organic chemistry but also included the nature of ions in aqueous solutions.
  • Neodymium was discovered in 1885 by the Austrian chemist Carl Auer von Welsbach, who also discovered praseodymium.
  • Norman Hackerman (March 2, 1912 – June 16, 2007) was an American chemist, professor, and academic administrator who served as the 18th President of the University of Texas at Austin (1967–1970) and later as the 4th President of Rice University (1970–1985).
  • It is a rare and lustrous silvery-white metal discovered in 1802 by the English chemist William Hyde Wollaston.
  • Discovered in 1857 by the French chemist Marcellin Berthelot, it became commercially available in the US by 1911.
  • The term was first used by organic chemist Ludwig Brieger (1849–1919) and is derived from the word "toxic".
  • Piperidine was first reported in 1850 by the Scottish chemist Thomas Anderson and again, independently, in 1852 by the French chemist Auguste Cahours, who named it.
  • Richard Errett Smalley (June 6, 1943 – October 28, 2005) was an American chemist who was the Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry, Physics, and Astronomy at Rice University.
  • Robert Ghormley Parr (September 22, 1921 – March 27, 2017) was an American theoretical chemist who was a professor of chemistry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.



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