bacteriology

IPA: bæktɪriˈɑɫʌdʒi

noun

  • (biology, microbiology) The scientific study of bacteria, especially in relation to disease and agriculture.
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Examples of "bacteriology" in Sentences

  • He was responsible for the introduction of many new techniques and innovations in bacteriology.
  • "Of course I do!" she answered -- "You see, it's all a question of what they call bacteriology nowadays.
  • The protective measures relating to food and water supplies indicate a superhuman knowledge of bacteriology.
  • (1870 – 1961) is, after Louis Pasteur, the greatest name in bacteriology and immunology in th early 20th century.
  • In 1940 he graduated from Harvard Medical School and was appointed as resident physician in bacteriology at The Children's
  • The great series of triumphs was, however, to follow upon etiological studies made by men trained in bacteriology and parasitology.
  • Sherrington stayed with Koch to do research in bacteriology for a year, and in 1887 he was appointed Lecturer in Systematic Physiology at St. Thomas's Hospital, London, and also was elected a Fellow of
  • With a background in bacteriology, Dr. McCullough suspected that the blood cells were forming the equivalent of a bacterial colony and that this was the source of the new blood cells that were keeping the animals alive.
  • Initially I started to work on virus-induced chromosomal modifications and at the same time received relatively solid training in diagnostic bacteriology and virology, both of them at that time in an early stage of development.
  • These publications are historical sources for a period which witnessed the transition from a humoral to a biochemical tradition, which was based on laboratorial science and document the important breakthroughs in bacteriology, parasitology and the developments of vaccines in a colonial context

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synonyms for bacteriologydescribing words for bacteriology
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