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Huggins

[ US /ˈhəɡɪnz/ ]
NOUN
  1. English astronomer who pioneered spectroscopic analysis in astronomy and who discovered the red shift (1824-1910)

How To Use Huggins In A Sentence

  • Huggins made satisfaction for his debt.
  • the federal government replaced the powerfully pro-settler Sir Godfrey Huggins with the even tougher and more determined ex-trade unionist
  • Prayer is one way to get you closer to God, but the Anglican Bishop of Grafton, Philip Huggins used more earthly means - a cherry picker to be precise - during Saturday's blessing of the new six-bell carillon at St Andrews Church.
  • Lady Margaret Huggins (1848-1915), the daughter of a Dublin solicitor, became a pioneer of astronomical spectroscopy in partnership with her husband, Sir William Huggins (1824-1910) at their home in Tulse Hill The Prime Minister's haiku
  • Stover's diverse music resume goes back to 2000, when he joined the "weird performance-art project" called Big Jeter, the creation of filmmaker Gary Huggins who gave Stover the nickname DJ Clem. Kansas City Star: Front Page
  • Mr. Huggins was ordered to start serving his term immediately, while Messrs. Former Synthes Officers Receive Prison Sentences
  • It was discovered by William Herschel on February 15, 1786, and was the first planetary nebula whose spectrum was investigated, by the English amateur astronomer William Huggins in 1864.
  • On the day they visited him, Professor Huggins was dining.
  • Here is supposed to compensate for the lack of a non-combinatorial entropy contribution in the Flory-Huggins treatment.
  • One of the people who went to his aid was his friend and fellow soccer player David Huggins.
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