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Definition of Pierre Curie
1. Noun. French physicist; husband of Marie Curie (1859-1906).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Pierre Curie
Literary usage of Pierre Curie
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature by H.W. Wilson Company (1917)
"11 Am City 17: 253-4 S '17 Curie, Marie Sklodowska (Mme Pierre Curie) 1867- Marie
Sklodowska Curie: the heroine of radium. MR Parkman. pors St N 44:594-9 My ..."
2. St. Nicholas by Mary Mapes Dodge (1916)
"the way of our obtaining the necessary material to go on with our work," lamented
Pierre Curie. "What we discover belongs to the world—to any one who can ..."
3. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1908)
"Nevertheless, the method which gives the most reliable results is that which was
employed by Pierre Curie and Mdme. Curie in their researches, ..."
4. Eminent Chemists of Our Time by Benjamin Harrow (1920)
"The result was that Marie was put into the hands of Pierre Curie, one of Lippmann's
most promising pupils. Given a scholar, an impressionable young man, ..."
5. Eminent Chemists of Our Time by Benjamin Harrow (1920)
"The result was that Marie was put into the hands of Pierre Curie, one of Lippmann's
most promising pupils. Given a scholar, an impressionable young man, ..."
6. The Affairs of Women: A Modern Miscellany by Colin Bingham (2006)
"When Pierre Curie was killed in a street accident in 1906, Marie continued the
scientific work in which they had collaborated, and in 1911 was awarded the ..."