Wikipedia
Josephson is a patronymic surname meaning "son of Joseph". Notable people with the surname include:
- Andy Josephson (born 1964), American lawyer and politician
- Brian David Josephson (born 1940), Welsh physicist
- Duane Josephson (1942–1997), American baseball player
- Erland Josephson (1923–2012), Swedish actor and author
- Ernst Josephson (1851–1906), Swedish painter
- Ian Josephson, Canadian judge
- Julien Josephson (1881–1959), American motion picture screenwriter
- Karen Josephson (born 1964), American swimmer
- Les Josephson (born 1942), American football player
- Mark Josephson (born 1943), American cardiac electrophysiologist
- Matthew Josephson (1899–1978), American journalist and author
- Sarah Josephson (born 1964), American swimmer
Usage examples of "josephson".
Clayton Miller, the man whose severe pulmonary edema he and Steven Josephson had reversed by removing almost a unit of blood.
The house north of it a wattle-and-daub construction Brad Josephson would never have recognized as his own lovingly maintained split-level seems to explode outward in all directions, shooting jagged chunks of wood and slabs of dried mud into the air.
The Carvers would know different, of course, but they were occupied with their kids, and Brad Josephson was still behind him, bent over and trying to catch his breath.
He checks the rearview again and catches sight of something bright red up on Bear Street beyond the Josephson place a van, it looks like, parked just beyond the southwestern corner of the intersection and then swoops his Schwinn back across the street again, this time to 247, the Wyler place.
He stepped out into the street as if he meant to cross over to the Josephsons, then stopped.
When the scientists began to kick the quantum theory around they came up with any number of odd effects - the tunnel diode, the Josephson effect, and a lot more - some of them are usable and some not.
The prince was a computer genius some said he had thought in binary codes in his creche and teethed on chips--and when he was barely out of his teens, he had mastered the use of the Josephson junctions in what he termed an "idiot proof" applica tion to regulate with complete safety the vast flow of skycars and drones in and out of major Linear depots and over densely populated areas.
The first one had had prostate cancer- undiagnosed-and the rot had started there, spreading through his body with such unexpected speed that it had been lucky to get to Josephson in time.
As he spoke, Conlig thought, a kind of subliminal message was radiating out of him at Josephson.