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Answer for the clue "Famous name in chemicals ", 6 letters:
dupont

Alternative clues for the word dupont

Word definitions for dupont in dictionaries

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 2452 Housing Units (2000): 977 Land area (2000): 5.693862 sq. miles (14.747033 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.017367 sq. miles (0.044980 sq. km) Total area (2000): 5.711229 sq. miles (14.792013 sq. km) FIPS code: 18965 Located within: Washington ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Dupont is a subway station on the Yonge–University line in Toronto , Ontario , Canada . It is located on Spadina Road at Dupont Street in The Annex neighbourhood of the city.

Usage examples of dupont.

The hemp drying oil business went principally to DuPont petrochemicals.

Maybe at this very moment he's selling the Eiffel Tower to an American tourist and going under the name Dupont.

As to the 250 of the new third, these are liberals of 1789 or moderates of 1791,[42] most of them honorable men and many of them well-informed and of real merit, jurisconsults, officers, administrators, members of the Constitutional Assembly or Feuillants in the Legislative Assembly, Mathieu Dumas, Vaublanc, Dupont de Nemours, Siméon, Barbé-Marbois and Tronçon- Ducoudray.

Bass said to third platoon's communications man, Lance Corporal Dupont, as soon as the squad leaders reported everyone in position and everything quiet.

While ambulances were speeding to Dupont Circle and rescue workers were digging through the ghastly mine of bodies in the Metro station, Gilbert Havel walked toward City Hall, two miles away.

She has always said, even to Dupont, that it was the way le Bon Dieu made him, and that because he was made that way he was greater than all other men in the North Country.

To Dana Beal, for all his work and research brilliance in connecting the DuPont Dynasties by Jerry Colby with the information on the outlawing of hemp.

An almost unlimited tonnage of natural fiber and cellulose would have become available to the American farmer in 1937, the year DuPont patented nylon and the polluting wood-pulp paper sulfide process.

By 1998, the original justification for the merger had evaporated, and there were compelling reasons for us to break free of DuPont.

Doughton,* a key DuPont ally, quickly rubber-stamped the secret Treasury bill and sent it sailing through Congress to the President.