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Definition of Diagnostician
1. Noun. A doctor who specializes in medical diagnosis.
Specialized synonyms: Aetiologist, Etiologist
Generic synonyms: Medical Specialist, Specialist
Specialized synonyms: Florey, Howard Florey, Sir Howard Walter Florey, Karl Landsteiner, Landsteiner, Paget, Sir James Paget, Francis Peyton Rous, Peyton Rous, Rous, Rudolf Karl Virchow, Rudolf Virchow, Virchow
Derivative terms: Diagnostics, Pathology, Pathology
Definition of Diagnostician
1. Noun. a person who diagnoses, especially a medical doctor. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Diagnostician
1. [n -S]
Medical Definition of Diagnostician
1. One who is skilled in making diagnoses; formerly, a name for specialists in internal medicine. (05 Mar 2000)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Diagnostician
Literary usage of Diagnostician
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Nutrition and Growth in Children by William Robie Patten Emerson (1922)
"A Social Diagnostician.—The nutrition worker is so closely concerned in the social
examination that she may be called a social diagnostician. ..."
2. Investigating an Industry: A Scientific Diagnosis of the Diseases of Management by William Kent, Henry Laurence Gantt (1913)
"... CHAPTER II A Business Diagnostician AFTER further explanation of the impending
competition and the threatened lowering of prices, it was conceded by all ..."
3. The Clinical Journal (1899)
"... surrounded by dense inflammatory material, may exactly simulate hard carcinoma,
and utterly confound and deceive a too positive diagnostician, who may, ..."
4. The Surgery of the abdomen by Bayard Taylor Holmes (1904)
"CHAPTER VI DIAGNOSIS AND DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF APPENDICITIS The responsibility
of the diagnostician; the diagnosis of appendicitis always relative; ..."
5. Outlines of the History of Medicine and the Medical Profession by Henry Ebenezer Handerson, Johann Hermann Baas (1889)
"l an eminent reputation as a clinician and diagnostician, though lie became blind.
... The diagnostician of the school was A. Siebert, professor in Jena, ..."