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Lwoff
[ lwawf ]
noun
- An·dré [ah, n, -, drey], 1902–1994, French microbiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1965.
Lwoff
/ lwôf /
- French microbiologist who studied the genetics of bacterial viruses and explained how they reproduce. His findings have been important in cancer research and in understanding how viruses resist drugs.
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Example Sentences
Lwoff knew that viruses are easier to describe than to define.
From National Geographic
“I shall defend a paradoxical viewpoint,” wrote the French microbiologist André Lwoff in “The Concept of Virus,” an influential essay published in 1957, “namely that viruses are viruses.”
From National Geographic
Monod and Jacob knew each other distantly; both were close associates of the microbial geneticist André Lwoff.
From Literature
Later that morning LwofF mentioned that Pauling was coming out for a few hours the next day.
From Literature
During a break in the morning session I caught sight of Wyman’s bony, aristocratic face in search of Andre Lwoff.
From Literature
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