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Answer for the clue "United States biochemist (born in Poland) who showed that several diseases were caused by dietary deficiencies and who coined the term `vitamin' for the chemicals involved (1884-1967) ", 4 letters:
funk

Alternative clues for the word funk

Word definitions for funk in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Funk \Funk\ (f[u^ ng]k), n. an earthy, seemingly unsophisticated style of jazz music having elements of black American blues and gospel.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a state of nervous depression; "he was in a funk" [syn: blue funk ] United States biochemist (born in Poland) who showed that several diseases were caused by dietary deficiencies and who coined the term `vitamin' for the chemicals involved (1884-1967) ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Funk commonly refers to a musical style Funk or Funky may also refer to: Music : Funk carioca , known as funk in Brazil, musical genre Luis "Funky" Marrero , a Hip-hop, and rap Christian contemporary music singer Funk (album) , 2002, by Bulldog Mansion ...

Usage examples of funk.

Antrim was as near to being in a funk as Billy Antrim ever allowed himself to get.

I was enough of a peacenik, optimist, and funker to take the other view.

Zoroaster, every young funker in the country, with nothing else to do, will want to join up so he can wear the shirt and roar around with the others on hoverbikes.

His moods were too unpredictable: one minute he would be in an almost catatonic funk, crouched in the back seat of a black Cadillac limousine with an overcoat over his head -- and then, with no warning at all, he would suddenly be out of the car at a red light somewhere in the Bronx, playing stickball in the street with a gang of teenage junkies.

He picks up speed and seems to lose his gangliness, the slouchy funk of hormones and unbelonging and all the stammering things that seal his adolescence.

One of our two Japanese and both our Tahitians funked and had to be slapped on the back and cheered up and dragged along by main strength toward life.

Through the blue funk of her thoughts, she followed Naroin along a trail overlooking the bright sea, walking in silence back to where the reavers had dumped enough food and supplies to last until the next promised shipment.

Eschaton debacle and his failure to intervene or even get up out of his patio-chair, Hal has lost a bit of his grip and has just gotten on the outside of his fourth chocolate cannoli in half an hour, and is feeling the icy electric keening of some sort of incipient carie in the left-molar range, and also now as usual, after swinishness with sugar, finds himself sinking, emotionally, into a kind of distracted funk.

Next time General Rodgers is in a funk or Martha goes into one of her bootlick rants, just slip 'em in and pretend to listen.

I'll say only that in addition to the blue funk I felt at the mere sight of Lahore's frowning gates and brooding towers, I had the liveliest misgivings about the plan whereby we were to spirit young Dalip out of the cobra's nest.

I was in a funk when I got down to my new offices at nine-twenty-a pale blue funk, two shades lighter than dark blue depression.

That was enough to set me in a blue funk, at the very thought, but what I was really afraid of was Arnold himself.

I was in a blue funk at the thought of trying to decamp, but the longer I waited, the harder it might become.

Maybe the lesson for a troublemaker is to know when to can the crap, shut the mouth, stop trying to fake the funk and just fess, there is no great revealment in this little story.

The young (or, to be exact, the younger, because Dubdub for all his fogeyish attire had by no means done with his youth) came to heckle and boo but left more quietly and thoughtfully, seduced by his deep sweetness of nature, by that same blue-eyed innocence and concomitant certainty of being heard that had roused Malik Solanka from his first-day funk.