Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "One barely seen around Australia, having left Darwin? ", 10 letters:
naturalist

Alternative clues for the word naturalist

Word definitions for naturalist in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE great ▪ Not until the late nineteenth century, the era of the great amateur naturalists , was the catalogue complete. ▪ Reaumur was also one of the great naturalists of his time. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Audubon had ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context dated English) A person committed to studying nature or natural history. 2 (context philosophy English) A person who believe in or advocate the tenets of philosophical or methodological naturalism.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Naturalist is an autobiography by naturalist , entomologist , and sociobiologist Edward O. Wilson first published in 1994 by Island Press . In it he writes on his childhood and the beginnings of his interest in biology, on his work in entomology and myrmecology ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"student of plants and animals," c.1600, from French naturaliste , from natural (see natural (adj.)). Earlier "one who studies natural, rather than spiritual, things" (1580s).

Usage examples of naturalist.

But it is conceivable that the now utterly lost branchiae might have been gradually worked in by natural selection for some quite distinct purpose: in the same manner as, on the view entertained by some naturalists that the branchiae and dorsal scales of Annelids are homologous with the wings and wing-covers of insects, it is probable that organs which at a very ancient period served for respiration have been actually converted into organs of flight.

Other arborescent species, unknown to the young naturalist, bent over the stream, which could be heard murmuring beneath the bowers of verdure.

The belemnite, it turned out, had been discovered four years earlier by an amateur naturalist named Chaning Pearce, and the discovery had been fully reported at a meeting of the Geological Society.

He had a stuffed bittern in his study, and knew the names of quite a number of wild flowers, so his aunt had possibly some justification in describing him as a great naturalist.

But between the real but obscure knowledge of the mystic and the clear but unreal knowledge of the verbalist, lies the clearish and realish knowledge of the naturalist and the man of science.

Not until 1893, when a researcher and naturalist named Elliott Coues rediscovered their all but forgotten manuscripts mouldering in a cupboard at the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia and produced an annotated edition of their journals, were they at last accorded recognition as naturalists, cartographers and ethnologists.

How many things be there, which when as a mere naturalist, thou hast barely considered of according to their nature, thou doest let pass without any further use?

The day after I had bade them farewell, I slept at Nimes, where I spent three days in the company of a naturalist: M.

It is like getting one of the tail bones of the ichthyosaurus from which a naturalist can reconstruct the entire animal.

Although the term leopard, as applied to panthers, has the sanction of almost immemorable custom, I do not see why, in writing on the subject, we should perpetuate the misnomer, especially as most naturalists and sportsmen are now inclined to make the proper distinction.

May not those naturalists who, knowing far less of the laws of inheritance than does the breeder, and knowing no more than he does of the intermediate links in the long lines of descent, yet admit that many of our domestic races have descended from the same parents--may they not learn a lesson of caution, when they deride the idea of species in a state of nature being lineal descendants of other species?

Among the older naturalists, such as Pliny and Aristotle, and even in the older historians, whose scope included natural as well as civil and political history, the atypic and bizarre, and especially the aberrations of form or function of the generative organs, caught the eye most quickly.

If the Ornithorhynchus had been covered with feathers instead of hair, this external and trifling character would, I think, have been considered by naturalists as important an aid in determining the degree of affinity of this strange creature to birds and reptiles, as an approach in structure in any one internal and important organ.

Orne, killed, after a battle of nearly forty hours, a marine monster whose size and aspect produced the greatest possible stir in scientific circles and caused certain Boston naturalists to take every precaution for its taxidermic preservation.

While the populace gazed with stupid wonder on the splendid show, the naturalist might indeed observe the figure and properties of so many different species, transported from every part of the ancient world into the amphitheatre of Rome.