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Marie Curie

NOUN
  1. French chemist (born in Poland) who won two Nobel prizes; one (with her husband and Henri Becquerel) for research on radioactivity and another for her discovery of radium and polonium (1867-1934)

How To Use Marie Curie In A Sentence

  • Staff will be dressing in shorts, Hawaiian shirts, bikinis, flower garlands and grass skirts, and there will be hula-hooping, hula dancing and limbo competitions in aid of the Marie Curie Cancer Care Unit.
  • Marie Curie is famous for her contribution to science.
  • Down deep in that ugly heap Marie Curie felt sure that her new element lay hidden.
  • Marie Curie is famous for her contribution to science.
  • Marie Curie Cancer Care provides high quality nursing, totally free of charge, to give terminally ill people the choice of dying at home surrounded by the things and people they hold most dear.
  • Polonium was the first element to be discovered by Marie Curie and her husband Pierre as they analyzed pitchblende, an ore of uranium, in 1898.
  • Down deep in that ugly heap Marie Curie felt sure that her new element lay hidden.
  • Down deep in that ugly heap Marie Curie felt sure that her new element lay hidden.
  • The Marie Curie Actions offer numerous opportunities to individual researchers to participate in a research team in another country.
  • The graph above which identifies francium by its radiation is from the notebook of the discoverer, Margurerite Perey, an assistant to Marie Curie.
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