Alternative terms

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Lexicographical Neighbors of

man in the street
man is a wolf to man
man is the measure of all things
man jack
man magnet
man of God
man of action
man of affairs
man of deeds
man of few words
man of letters
man of means
man of one's word
man of parts
man of science (current term)
man of size
man of straw
man of the cloth
man of the hour
man of the world
man of war
man on
man on the Clapham omnibus
man on the street
man orchid
man overboard
man page
man pages
man pr

Literary usage of

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Writings of Thomas Jefferson. by Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Adgate Lipscomb, Albert Ellery Bergh (1905)
"JEFFERSON AS A MAN OF SCIENCE. It is an interesting tribute to the value of the scientific mind that two of the men among the most important in the ..."

2. The Writings of Thomas Jefferson by Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson memorial association of the United States (1905)
"JEFFERSON AS A MAN OF SCIENCE. It is an interesting tribute to the of the scientific mind that two of the men among the most important in the establishment ..."

3. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1899)
"It is not so much the men of science who make science, as some spirit which, born of the truths already won, drives the man of science onward and uses him ..."

4. Library of Southern Literature by John Calvin Metcalf (1909)
"AN EMINENT MAN OF SCIENCE AN EARNEST CHRISTIAN Address at a banquet in honor of Dr. ... AN eminent man of science who is a church-member and a decided and ..."

5. The Popular Science Monthly (1878)
"Different atmospheres are required by the man of science, as such, and the man of action. The atmosphere, for example, which vivifies and stimulates your ..."

6. Dictionary of National Biography by LESLIE. STEPHEN (1899)
"... man of science and inventor, son of W. Wheatstone, a music-seller of Gloucester, was born at Gloucester in February 1802, and educated in a private ..."

7. The Popular Science Monthly (1894)
"So complicated are the forces of Nature that one discovery is sure to lead to another, and the man of science soon learns that he never exhausts attainable ..."

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