The Collaborative International Dictionary
Whitecoat \White"coat`\, n. The skin of a newborn seal; also, the seal itself. [Sealers' Cant]
Wiktionary
n. 1 A new-born baby harp or grey seal before its fur becomes grey, normally around 12 days old. 2 (context derogatory English) A laboratory scientist.
Wikipedia
Usage examples of "whitecoat".
Ryan grabbed him, fingers biting like steel pincers, making the whitecoat wince and squeak in pain.
Ryan could just make out the round lenses of its eyeglasses under the hoary growth of frost From the dates on the jars, the whitecoat had lived in the redoubt for decades before pulling his own plug.
A brief image flashed into his mind of a tall man standing next to Silas as the bullets slammed into the hated whitecoat, blowing away chunks of his screaming body.
But then that bastard Ryan had fried the whitecoat to a crisp and ruined the plan.
He and the companions had uncovered the predark whitecoat technology and used it whenever they could to move around Deathlands.
A tall, lanky whitecoat walked through the door, instead, and advanced onto the catwalk.
If they did have an eye in the sky, they could do all this by themselves, with whitecoat technology.
A small fire broke out, doused immediately by an alarmed whitecoat with a high-domed forehead and bug eyes.
He mentioned as much to the whitecoat, who gave a short, barking laugh.
I was held a hapless prisoner by the fiendish whitecoat scientists, before they fired me forward into Deathlands, I became very fond of folk music.
The whitecoat outside the armaglass door contin- ued to try to convince Ryan.
The whitecoats had released chimpanzees onto the School grounds and let newly made Erasers loose after them.
We were created by scientists, whitecoats, who grafted avian DNA onto our human genes.
To the whitecoats, she was a piece of science equipment, like a test tube.
For just an instant he saw her, white and lifeless, laid on a cold steel slab while whitecoats lectured about her unusual bone structure.