View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Zoologist.

Zoologist

Zoologist | Zoologists

Zoologist meaning

One who studies or practices zoology.

Synonyms of Zoologist

Example sentences (20)

Malá Fatra National Park zoologist Tomáš Flajs confirmed that an attack of such a scale has never been reported until now.

The zoologist, 25, confirmed to The Sun: "No, I've not left.

When he qualified in 1968, the world opened to him and his wife Sonia, a zoologist.

A zoologist named Jaroslav Cerveny wanted to study fox hunting behavior more closely.

British zoologist Adam Britton has been sentenced to 10 years and five months in prison after he admitted to sexually abusing dozens of dogs in Australia.

Zoologist Ashby investigates the wonders displayed – and those locked away – in cabinets around the country, tracing the biases and ideologies inherent in museum collections and considering how they can be unpicked.

But the trio of friends will have to stay one step ahead of Burnish (Eddie Izzard), a wealthy man intent on capturing a yeti, and zoologist Dr. Zara (Sarah Paulson), to help Everest get home.

In the late 1800s Grinnell, a zoologist and anthropologist by training, surmised that the United States was experiencing an alarming decline of birds and other wildlife.

His counterpart is Professor Walling (Josh Bailey), a zoologist who primarily studies guinea pigs—well, just one guinea pig, Jane (Dame Abigail Fluffball).

Left: Heavy canvas poncho, c.1910, owned by Seattle zoologist Dr. Belle A. Stevens.

Zoologist Mati Kaal, former director of Tallinn Zoo, however said that it is very unusual for cubs of this age to be roaming around on their own.

A third opinion from American zoologist Gerrit Smith Miller concluded Piltdown's jaw came from a fossil ape.

Bates was 19 years old, and in 1843 he had published a paper on beetles in the journal Zoologist.

Etymology and taxonomy The name "gastrotrich" comes from the Greek γαστήρ gaster, meaning "stomach", and θρίξ thrix, meaning "hair". citation The name was coined by the Russian zoologist Élie Metchnikoff in 1865.

Haeckel was a zoologist, artist, writer, and later in life a professor of comparative anatomy.

In 1877–1878, English zoologist Philip Sclater described two partially albino specimens from South Africa.

In a 1996 USA Today article, Washington State zoologist John Crane said, "There is no such thing as Bigfoot.

Kinsey was a zoologist at Indiana University and the founder of the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction (more widely known as the Kinsey Institute).

Lankester commented that Huxley was "only accidentally a zoologist".

Molecular proof of this principle was subsequently found through observation of meiosis by two scientists independently, the German botanist Oscar Hertwig in 1876, and the Belgian zoologist Edouard Van Beneden in 1883.