|
Перевод: druggist
[существительное] аптекарь ; фармацевт
Тезаурус:
- , George (1806-;1877), analytical chemist, was born in February 1806 (he was baptized 12 July 1807) in Totnes, Devon, the child of James Phillipps, druggist, and his wife Ann.
- , Robert (1803-;1880), surgeon and factory inspector, was born 15 August 1803 in York, the second son of John Baker, druggist of High Ousegate, York, and his wife Hannah.
- Chemist and Druggist , 5 and 12 October 1907, 13 June 1908, and 31 July 1909; The Times , 28 November 1877; Australian Journal of Pharmacy , November 1901; Patent Office.
- He left the grammar school in Narberth at fifteen to become apprenticed to a Narberth druggist.
- , John (1745-;1828), cartographer, map engraver, and land surveyor, was born 22 April 1745 in Jedburgh, the younger son and younger child of John Ainslie, druggist in Jedburgh and burgess of the burgh.
- In 1844 his father left schoolmastering to become a druggist and Hargreaves was introduced to medicine and chemistry.
- He was educated at schools in Rochester and privately at home, and then at the age of sixteen became apprenticed to his uncle, a chemist and druggist in Bristol.
- , Walter Goodall (1858-;1943), runner, was the second of three children and younger son of Frederick Benjamin George, chemist and druggist of Calne, Wiltshire, and his wife Elizabeth.
- A women quoted in Ethel Elderton's 1914 study declared that she'd "rather swallow the druggist's shop and the man in't than have another kid".
- In 1826 she married John Taylor, a prosperous dry-salter and wholesale druggist in Mark Lane, the son of John Taylor, who followed the same occupation.
- Other interesting trades of the time were shoemakers, a weaver, a straw-hat maker, a druggist and a castrator, plus the more usual ones.
- He had little schooling, and went to work at the age of twelve, apprenticed to an uncle in a chemist and druggist business in Chesterfield.
- It is however impossible to believe that among these-bearing in mind that each applicant had to be sponsored by some reputable person -there were, as some claimed, barbers, man-milliners, tailors, shoemakers, mercers, mutton pie men, rat catchers, razor-strop makers, razor grinders, a druggist's porter, insolvent debtors, and in general, the out-at-elbow fraternity.
|
|
|