¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Pathologists
1. pathologist [n] - See also: pathologist
Lexicographical Neighbors of Pathologists
Literary usage of Pathologists
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 (1919)
"I have seen mycologists bored to extinction while pathologists excitedly ...
That pathologists have been growing apart from other botanists there can be no ..."
2. Philadelphia Medical Times (1882)
"several pathologists to be due to inflammation ; I ascribe this cause to nearly
... Again, those pathologists regard inflammation only as an exciting cause, ..."
3. History of Civilization in England by Henry Thomas Buckle (1878)
"The pathologists, on the other hand, are so much in arrear, that the diseases of
... But they produced two pathologists of great ability, and to whom we owe ..."
4. Annual Report by Correctional Association of New York (1870)
"As the practical issue of the foregoing facts and arguments, it seems to us that
a commission should be formed of the ablest mental pathologists and ..."
5. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1865)
"cause of typhoid fever, as we have been taught by the older pathologists. If the
poison of typhoid fever could be completely antagonized, all the effects, ..."
6. Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge by Charles Knight (1837)
"The labours of pathologists, conducted as they now are, with a precision and ...
But pathologists have hitherto made but slight progress in determining with ..."
7. On Diseases Peculiar to Women: Including Displacements of the Uterus by Hugh Lenox Hodge (1860)
"Modern pathologists have been driven to its use, in speculating on the morbid
states of the ... although he, like most pathologists, wandered from the 4 ..."