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The Collaborative International Dictionary
pathologist

pathologist \pa*thol"o*gist\, n. [Cf. F. pathologiste.] One skilled in pathology; an investigator in pathology; as, the pathologist of a hospital, whose duty it is to determine the causes of the diseases.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
pathologist

1640s, from pathology + -ist.

Wiktionary
pathologist

n. An expert in pathology; a specialist who examines samples of body tissues for diagnostic or forensic purpose.

WordNet
pathologist

n. a doctor who specializes in medical diagnosis [syn: diagnostician]

Wikipedia
Pathologist (band)

Pathologist was a Czech grindcore band from Ostrava, formed in 1990.

Pathologist (disambiguation)

A pathologist is a scientist or medical doctor who specialises in pathology, which is the diagnosing of disease using organs, tissue, and body fluids.

Pathologist may also refer to:

  • Pathologist (band), a Czech band

Usage examples of "pathologist".

Esterases in the body break the drug down rapidly into acetylcholine, so it is also likely to be undetectable, unless the target happens to croak right outside a primo medical center with a very sharp pathologist who is looking for something out of the ordinary.

Weston incised the ovaries, looking for the cor 9 See Appendix 1: Delicatessen Pathologists.

LaPointe, Bouvier is a bachelor, and he puts in a prodigious amount of time down in the bowels of the QG, where his duties have spread far beyond those normally assigned to a staff pathologist.

The British pathologist, Sir Gordon Roy Cameron, who conducted one of these endeavors, a fellow of the Royal College of pathologists, later knighted for his contributions to the field, observed that the 1947 study had employed formalin as a fixative agent for the tissues, which is not suitable for cytological studies on account of its tendency to produce artifacts of precisely the kind that had been identified as hyperplasia nodules.

Nevertheless, it would appear to be advantageous for the pathologist not to interject himself into the actual profiling process prior to completing his own analysis of the pertinent submitted materials.

The scene and autopsy room photographs provided to the profiler must be examined not only to confirm information presented as fact, but also to identify findings present that may not have been appreciated or described by the pathologist who performed the postmortem examination.

In due course, the police, the ambulance, the pathologist, Dr Matthew Malkin, and Lord Sackbut himself, gathered by the lake.

The men and women of the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of New York, pathologists and serologists, were my heroes before September 11, 2001, and will be forever.

He also worked closely with a pathologist at Bethesda Naval Hospital to understand autopsies.

If Martinez had been in charge of arrangements, the funeral and its solemn procession would have been postponed for days if not months, while expert pathologists sought out every last secret of Shaa physiology, and the best cyberneticians examined the machines to determine if they were, in fact, repositories of Shaa memory.

It had been undressed and laid faceup on a stainless steel table by the time the senior duty pathologist came in.

In 1986, Gene Johnson had infected monkeys with Ebola and Marburg by letting them breathe it into their lungs, and she had been the pathologist for that experiment.

Dolson here is not a forensic odontologist, forensic anthropologist, forensic pathologist, or a dentist, is she?

A pathologist may analyze the organs and brain, an entomologist the insects, an odontologist the teeth and dental records, a molecular biologist the DNA, and a ballistics expert the bullets and casings, while the forensic anthropologist pores over the bones.

Whenever possible Claudine had always attended postmortems, prompting tests and examinations to answer her own special and sometimes peculiar questions, as well as those of the pathologist.