VGAsoft logo

VGAsoft | Разработка программного обеспечения

HomeContact us


English ⇔ Russian
 
LMBomber
Dictionary
Speech
Download
Forum

Перевод слова


Перевод: druggist speek druggist


[существительное]
аптекарь ; фармацевт


Тезаурус:

  1. , 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.
  2. , 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.
  3. 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.
  4. He left the grammar school in Narberth at fifteen to become apprenticed to a Narberth druggist.
  5. , 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.
  6. In 1844 his father left schoolmastering to become a druggist and Hargreaves was introduced to medicine and chemistry.
  7. 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.
  8. , 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.
  9. 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".
  10. 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.
  11. Other interesting trades of the time were shoemakers, a weaver, a straw-hat maker, a druggist and a castrator, plus the more usual ones.
  12. 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.
  13. 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.

MAGIA Site Design

    Copyright © 1986-2024 VGAsoft. All rights reserved.

About USPrivacy