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diagnostician

[ UK /dˌa‍ɪəɡnəstˈɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a doctor who specializes in medical diagnosis

How To Use diagnostician In A Sentence

  • He was from a species of the creep family, a diagnostician told me as a favor, later, after I was forced to declaw him. He Was Slim And His Eyes Were Wrong
  • Bob always had time to treat the whole person and was a first class diagnostician.
  • There's some people in town that say the doc is a fair to middlin 'diagnostician and prescription-writer, but let me whisper this to you -- but for heaven's sake don't tell him I said so -- don't you ever go to him for anything more serious than a pendectomy of the left ear or a strabismus of the cardiograph. Main Street
  • That’s right: no longer cadging drinks or wrestling with pimps in fleapit Manhattan hotel rooms, the arch-diagnostician of adult bullshit is currently trick-or-treating and going out for ice cream with his mother. Revenge of the Wimps
  • Nuance and foreshadowing and metaphor and symbolism and repetition are all pivotally important to any diagnostician. Kevin Patterson - An interview with author
  • He actually just wants to work under this genius diagnostician and continue to further his career. House's Jesse Spencer on Chase's Return, Playing Power Games and Molding New Team Members
  • He is a resolute 'classicist' in many ways, expressing his unease about Rilke to Maria von Wedemeyer when she shares her enthusiasm; Rilke is 'unhealthy', a diagnostician of the darker, more flawed and ambiguous regions of the spirit (yet he admired at least some of Dostoevsky). Dietrich Bonhoeffer - Archbishop's Speech to the International Bonhoeffer Congress, Poland
  • I am a board ... certified diagnostician with a double specialty of infectious disease and nephrology .
  • A reporter must first be a teacher but must also view his function as that of a diagnostician .
  • And we would feel constrained to confess ourselves poor diagnosticians if George Bernard Shaw, the enfant terrible of nimble wit in contemporaneous literature, succeeded in disproving the existence in himself of the same strain of blood as coursed in the veins of Heinrich Heine. The Social Disability of the Jew
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