nobel laureate in English

noun

winner of a Nobel prize (Nobel prizes are given for outstanding achievements in various professional fields)

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "nobel laureate" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "nobel laureate", or refer to the context using the word "nobel laureate" in the English Dictionary.

1. 1 He was a Nobel laureate in physics.

2. Bordet: ( bōr-dā' ), Jules, Belgian bacteriologist and Nobel laureate, 1870-1961

3. Named after Antoine-Henri Becquerel, French Nobel Laureate, who discoverered of radioactivity.

4. Here's National Medal of Science recipient Craig Venter and Nobel laureate Ham Smith.

5. Often dubbed the Anthropocene, the term originated from the Nobel Laureate atmospheric chemist Paul Crutzen

6. 12 Murphy and Nobel laureate Gary Becker and has defined economists'approaches to addiction ever since.

7. 18 Friedman argued that no single person, even a Nobel laureate, could make a pencil.

8. The airport is named after Bologna native Guglielmo Marconi, an Italian electrical engineer and Nobel laureate.

9. 11 Contributors have included a Nobel laureate and an an insane asylum, among thousands of others.

10. Pavlov won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1904, becoming the first Russian Nobel laureate.

11. The Burmese democracy activist and Nobel laureate, Aung San Suu Kyi, was a student of St Hugh's College.

12. 29 The real celebrity of last week's Frankfurt Book fair was the Nobel laureate, G ü nter Grass.

13. 13 Nobel laureate Enrico Fermi, discussing this observation with colleagues over lunch in 19 asked, logically: "Where are they?"

14. 28 Chu is a man who knows a lot, Nobel laureate in physics, our nation's 12th secretary of energy.

15. 3 A human interest story, featuring the second-youngest Nobel laureate in history, seemed to him much more promising.

16. Anthropocene has become an environmental buzzword ever since the atmospheric chemist and Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen popularized it in 2000.

17. Television cameras also showed South African Nobel laureate - retired Archbishop Desmond Tutu wearing a team jersey and dancing in the stands .

18. 'Buckyball' Nobel Laureate Richard Smalley Dies Scientist Richard Smalley helped discover a new form of carbon, known as "Buckyballs," for …

19. The Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Center supports explorations into the life and writings of the Nobel Laureate and Russian writer and historian Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

20. 14 This is the wisdom of 1986 Nobel Laureate James Buchanan, one of the most prolific and original economists of the twentieth century.

21. Otto Heinrich Warburg (/ˈvɑːrbɜːrɡ/; 8 October 1883 – 1 August 1970), son of physicist Emil Warburg, was a German physiologist, medical doctor, and Nobel laureate.

22. The Nobel Laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka, has described President Muhammadu Buhari as someone 'in a trance,' urging him to wake up to challenges Bedevilling the nation

23. (Luke 9:25; 1 Timothy 6:9, 10) Nobel laureate Albert Einstein once said: “Possessions, outward success, publicity, luxury —to me these have always been contemptible.

24. Agartala is popularly known as a Cultural Hub because of its famous temples, palaces, rich history of the Manikya kings and its connection to Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore

25. Gilman graduated from Case Western in 1969, then did his post-doctoral studies at the National Institutes of Health with Nobel laureate Marshall Nirenberg from 1969 to 1971.

26. 10 Harold Pinter, the British playwright and Nobel laureate famous for brooding portrayals of domestic life and his barbed politics,(Sentencedict.com) died aged 78 on Christmas Eve after battling cancer.

27. Duffer's drift For insight, she turns to the nonfiction and fiction of the Nigerian novelist and Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, who in Season of Anomy underwrites the Western myth of Orpheus with the

28. In fact, the dogma of global free trade is forcing you to reduce wages and social protection to third world levels, as is tirelessly demonstrated by Maurice Allais, my country's economics Nobel laureate.

29. Paul Erhlich, the Nobel laureate famed for groundbreaking work ira hematology and immunology, coined the term chemotherapy and discovered Arsphenamine (Salvarsan), a form of arsenic and the first chemotherapeutic agent for systemic treatment of a microorganism

30. “Scientists and others sometimes use the word ‘God’ to mean something so abstract and unengaged that He is hardly to be distinguished from the laws of nature,” commented Steven Weinberg, Nobel laureate for his work on fundamental forces.

31. As recently as the late 1940s, many clinicians deemed the procedure a medical impossibility, with Nobel laureate Sir Peter Medawar Averring that a mysterious biological force "forever will inhibit transplantation from one individual to another."

32. 6 March 2005 in Ithaca, New York), scientist and Nobel laureate who helped develop the atomic bomb and later championed nuclear weapons reduction.Bethe was born in Strassburg (which became Strasbourg, France) when Alsace was part of the Wilhelminian empire

33. The name of British Nobel laureate Francis Crick (1916-2004) is inextricably tied to the discovery of the double helix of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in 1953, considered the most significant advance in the understanding of biology since Darwin's theory of evolution.

34. Until 1990, France-or, rather, much of its political class-tacitly agreed with Nobel laureate François Mauriac's famous confession: "I love Germany so much that I prefer it to be split into two parts ." ("J'aime tellement l'Allemagne que je préfère qu'il y en ait deux .")

35. Elinor Ostrom, the latest Nobel laureate of economics, clearly shows empirically across the world that we can govern the commons if we invest in trust, local, action-based partnerships and cross-scale institutional innovations, where local actors, together, can deal with the global commons at a large scale.

36. (IT) Mr President, ladies and gentlemen, we should have listened to the advice of the Nobel laureate, Maurice Allais, who called for a clear separation between business banks, credit banks and speculative banks, in accordance with the principles of the Glass-Steagall Act, which is not discussed in this report.

37. Alongside Night is the story of the final economic collapse of the United States as seen through the eyes of 16-year-old Elliot Vreeland, searching for his missing Nobel-laureate-economist father, and the mysterious teenage "Lorimer" whom Elliot meets in a black-market underground, whose own father might be

38. Still, as our team set about defining the global poverty line this year (and thus the incidence of poverty), I was acutely aware of the note of caution from Angus Deaton, this year’s Nobel laureate in economics: “I am not sure it is wise for the World Bank to commit itself so much to this project.”

39. Peter Agre / ˈ ɑː ɡ r iː / (born January 30, 1949) is an American physician, Nobel Laureate, and molecular biologist, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, and director of the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute.In 2003, Agre and Roderick MacKinnon shared the 2003 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for