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is and prolific
If the plants are cared for and protected over the winter, the second year is more prolific than the first.
" is attributed to his son William De Morgan, but a family friend John Thomas Graves was prolific, and a manuscript with over 2, 800 has been preserved.
Sir Alan Ayckbourn CBE ( born 12 April 1939 ) is a prolific English playwright.
Birdlife is prolific, most often seen at waterholes at dawn and dusk.
Though this enzyme is the most prolific creator of organic bromides by living organisms, other bromoperoxidases exist in nature that do not use vanadium.
Goldoni, a prolific writer, is best known for his comic play Servant of Two Masters, which has been translated and adapted internationally numerous times.
While he continued to be prolific throughout the 1930s and 1940s, he is probably best known for his 1956 film The Ten Commandments ( which is very different from his 1923 film of the same title ).
The cane toad is a prolific breeder ; females lay single-clump spawns with thousands of eggs.
1678, Harvard College ; A. M. 1681, honorary doctorate 1710, University of Glasgow ) was a socially and politically influential New England Puritan minister, prolific author and pamphleteer ; he is often remembered for his role in the Salem witch trials.
The crew is made up of four unique characters: Jet Black, a former ISSP police officer who retired following a mob hit that cost him his arm, Spike Spiegel, a laid-back exiled hitman of the ruthless Red Dragons ' Syndicate, Faye Valentine, a beautiful amnesiac con artist who awakened into the future world after a lengthy period of cryogenic hibernation, and Radical Edward, a hyperactive and barefooted preteen girl with a reputation as a prolific computer hacker.
An exceptionally prolific contributor is Christine Sutton of the University of Oxford, who contributed 24 articles on particle physics.
Goffman published his observations about Erdős ' prolific collaboration in a 1969 article entitled " And what is your Erdős number?
The evidence is found in two early maps, one made by the Portuguese cartographer Pedro Reinel in about 1522, the very first map to show the Falklands, the other a French copy of a Portuguese map bought in Lisbon by André Thévet ( 1516-1590 ), a Franciscan friar and prolific writer on many subjects ; this copy is now in the manuscript of a large unpublished work by Thevet in the Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris.
This is also true of the small but still active board game fandom scene, the most prolific subset of which is centered around play-by-mail Diplomacy.
Style Wars is still recognized as the most prolific film representation of what was going on within the young hip hop culture of the early 1980s.
Adult manga is often sold in convenience stores, book stores, and magazine stores in Japan, and also other public places such as airports, and is far more prolific and accessible than the U. S. adult comic book market.
He is also one of the most prolific mathematicians ever ; his collected works fill 60 – 80 quarto volumes.
The Leonids ( ) is a prolific meteor shower associated with the comet Tempel-Tuttle.
Adrian Fisher is both the most prolific contemporary author on mazes, and also one of the leading maze designers.
He is one of Britain's most prolific architects of his generation.
Known for a rich taste and thick pulp, it is a prolific bearer, grown around the world.

is and discoverer
Debierne, who is now considered by the vast majority of historians as the discoverer, lost interest in the element and left the topic.
The river, named Hamza after the discoverer, an Indian-born scientist Valiya Mannathal Hamza who is working with the National Observatory at Rio, makes it the first and geologically unusual instance of a twin-river system flowing at different levels of the earth's crust in Brazil.
However, the title of discoverer of Chile is usually assigned to Diego de Almagro.
He is the discoverer of Malden Island in the central Pacific, which is named in his honour.
Thomas Willis ( noted as the discoverer of the circle of Willis ) made note of the fact that the consistency of the CSF is altered in meningitis.
Given is each element's name, atomic number, year of first report, name of the discoverer, and some notes related to the discovery.
He participated in the Spanish conquest of Peru and is credited as the first European discoverer of Chile.
Few would dispute the verdict of James D. Forbes, an editor of the eighth edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica: " His scientific glory is different in kind from that of Young and Fresnel ; but the discoverer of the law of polarization of biaxial crystals, of optical mineralogy, and of double refraction by compression, will always occupy a foremost rank in the intellectual history of the age.
God graced me with being able, through such a singular sign, to reveal to my Lord my devotion and the desire I have that his glorious name live as equal among the stars, and since it is up to me, the first discoverer, to name these new planets, I wish, in imitation of the great sages who placed the most excellent heroes of that age among the stars, to inscribe these with the name of the Most Serene Grand Duke.
Ebbinghaus is also credited with discovering an optical illusion now known after its discovererthe Ebbinghaus illusion, which is an illusion of relative size perception.
Inorganic compounds show rich variety: A: Diborane features Three-center two-electron bond | unusual bonding B: Caesium chloride has an archetypal crystal structure C: Cyclopentadienyliron dicarbonyl dimer | Fp < sub > 2 </ sub > is an Organometallic chemistry | organometallic complex D: Polydimethylsiloxane | Silicone's uses range from breast implant s to Silly Putty E: Grubbs ' catalyst won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry | 2005 Nobel Prize for Robert H. Grubbs | its discoverer F: Zeolite s find extensive use as molecular sieve s G: Copper ( II ) acetate surprised Theoretical chemistry | theoreticians with its diamagnetism
John Napier is best known as the discoverer of logarithms.
He is best known as the discoverer of Grimm's Law, the author ( with his brother ) of the monumental Deutsches Wörterbuch, the author of Deutsche Mythologie and, more popularly, as one of the Brothers Grimm, as the editor of Grimm's Fairy Tales.
It is named after its discoverer, J. Margrave Julland.
It is sometimes called Dalton's Law after its discoverer, the English chemist John Dalton, who published it in the first part of the first volume of his " New System of Chemical Philosophy " ( 1808 ).
The component with a period of about 435 days is identified with the 8 month wandering predicted by Euler and is now called the Chandler wobble after its discoverer.
In Norway, this disorder is known as Følling's disease, named after its discoverer.
To some he is a daring adventurer and discoverer ; to others, a semi-legendary blunderer or prevaricator.
There is another contender for the discoverer of Iceland: Naddoddr, a Norwegian / Faeroese Viking explorer.
In many languages, X-radiation is called Röntgen radiation, after Wilhelm Röntgen, who is usually credited as its discoverer, and who had named it X-radiation to signify an unknown type of radiation.
Leviathan refers to the Biblical sea monster Leviathan, which is a potential danger to Hagbard's submarine Leif Erickson ( from the name of the Icelandic discoverer of America ).

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