¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Geodesists
1. geodesist [n] - See also: geodesist
Lexicographical Neighbors of Geodesists
Literary usage of Geodesists
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1904)
"... he traced the history of the measurements that had led to the successive views,
and discussed at length the present conclusions of geodesists. ..."
2. The Architecture and Planning of Classical Moscow: A Cultural History by Albert J. Schmidt (1989)
"The geodesists came from the Engineering Corps and Surveying Office of the ...
City and provincial geodesists and architects joined the regular staff, ..."
3. The Architecture and Planning of Classical Moscow: A Cultural History by Albert J. Schmidt (1989)
"The geodesists came from the Engineering Corps and Surveying Office of the ...
City and provincial geodesists and architects joined the regular staff, ..."
4. Proceedings by Pacific Science Association (1921)
"There are other phases of geophysics which are of much interest to geodesists
but they cannot be considered as strictly geodetic. ..."
5. Bering's Voyages: An Account of the Efforts of the Russians to Determine the by Frank Alfred Golder, Leonhard Stejneger (1922)
"To find geodesists who have been in Siberia and have returned. ... The Senate
learns that the following named geodesists have been in Siberia: Ivan Zakharov ..."
6. The Observatory by Royal Astronomical Society (Gran Bretaña), Royal Greenwich Observatory, NASA Astrophysics Data System Abstract Service, Royal astronomical society GB (1899)
"The Depot de la Guerre still contained some geodesists, but it gave no food for
their activity. One may say that with 1830, the date of the fusion of the ..."
7. The Observatory (1899)
"The Depot de la Guerre still contained some geodesists, but it gave no food for
their activity. One may say that with 1830, the date of the fusion of the ..."
8. A Memoir on the Indian Surveys by Clements Robert Markham (1878)
"surveyors, whether geodesists, geologists, antiquaries, ... If the triangulations
of the geodesists are the skeletons which the topographical surveyor ..."