microbiologist

English

Etymology

From micro- +‎ biologist.

Noun

microbiologist (plural microbiologists)

  1. A scientist whose speciality is microbiology.
    • 2016 March 24, Jon Henley, “The aggressive, outrageous, infuriating (and ingenious) rise of BrewDog”, in The Guardian[1], →ISSN:
      On a tour of the cavernous and gleaming BrewDog plant in Ellon, just north of Aberdeen, Dickie happily batted around terminology – IBU, ABV, pH, haze, present gravity, headspace oxygen – with PhD-level microbiologists working in the lab.
    • 2019 October 7, Sandee LaMotte, “The germiest place in your home and the best way to combat those microbes”, in CNN[2]:
      No, because we obsessively clean it (or use paper coverings at work), said microbiologist Charles Gerba, a professor of public health, environmental science and immunology at the University of Arizona.

Hyponyms

Translations

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French microbiologiste.

Noun

microbiologist m (plural microbiologiști)

  1. microbiologist

Declension

Declension of microbiologist
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative-accusative microbiologist microbiologistul microbiologiști microbiologiștii
genitive-dative microbiologist microbiologistului microbiologiști microbiologiștilor
vocative microbiologistule microbiologiștilor