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English biochemist who did pioneering work that led to the discovery of vitamins (1861-1947)
Answer for the clue "English biochemist who did pioneering work that led to the discovery of vitamins (1861-1947) ", 7 letters:
hopkins
Alternative clues for the word hopkins
- Famous Johns
- United States educator and theologian (1802-1887)
- United States financier and philanthropist who left money to found the university and hospital that bear his name in Baltimore (1795-1873)
- He played Nixon in "Nixon"
- "Thor" actor Anthony who's been knighted
- Welsh film actor (born in 1937)
Word definitions for hopkins in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Hopkins is an English , Welsh and Irish patronymic surname . The English and Welsh derivations mean "son of Hob". It derives from the Germanic warrior name Hrod-berht , translated as "renowned-fame". It was 'borrowed' into French, where the spelling was ...
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 17145 Housing Units (2000): 8390 Land area (2000): 4.076442 sq. miles (10.557936 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 4.076442 sq. miles (10.557936 sq. km) FIPS code: 30140 Located within: ...
Usage examples of hopkins.
Academy, where she changed into operations clothing - cargo pants and a blue shirt - and she ended up with Hopkins at a large gray building known as the Engineering Research Facility, or E.
We're going to roll overl' Mark Littleberry said to the man driving, Supervisory Special Agent William Hopkins, Jr, of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The Leatherman on his belt identified Hopkins as a 'tech agent' -- an F.
Pascal Arriet had given orders for the rest of the convoy to follow Littleberry and Hopkins, and now he was speaking in French and English to various relay contacts on his shortwave radio, telling them there was a problem.
The younger man -- who seemed to be an Iraqi -- began to circle around behind Hopkins, his suit making shuffling sounds.
Without a word to Hopkins, he grabbed the swab out of his hand and jammed it into the tube.
And Fehdak wasn't certain, but he thought he had seen Hopkins holding a swab inside the truck.
Will Hopkins reached down to his belt and pulled the Leatherman tool out of its case.
Still, it was a fine Sunday morning in Washington, and Hopkins was feeling lucky to be alive.
Most of the selecting had happened over the telephone, while she had been asleep in the car and Hopkins had been driving.
He and Hopkins explored the entire building from top to bottom, getting a sense of how the rooms were structured, where the windows were located, and where the air would flow.
He and Hopkins pounded a hole in one of the exterior walls of the Core, taking turns with a sledgehammer.
She went into the materials room, where Hopkins and Lesdiu were still examining the boxes, and, with a fine pair of tweezers, she obtained a small amount of dust from the Zecker-Moran box, which she dropped into a tiny plastic sample tube.
All bombs, as Hopkins had so passionately maintained at the SIOC meeting, contain forensic signatures that can guide an investigator to the builder of the bomb.
He had been trying to analyze the chunks of genetic material that Hopkins and Littleberry had beamed up to the satellite when they'd been locked in the rest room.