Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"dispensing chemist" Definitions
  1. a person whose job is to prepare and sell medicines, and who works in a shop

25 Sentences With "dispensing chemist"

How to use dispensing chemist in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dispensing chemist" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dispensing chemist". Mastering all the usages of "dispensing chemist" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It's easy to walk right past Arbequina, a tapas restaurant that still bears the signage of the "dispensing chemist" that used to occupy this location on Cowley Road.
The Timothy Whites logo on this ventilator grille is still in place in 2009 Timothy Whites was a British chain of dispensing chemist and houseware stores.
In 1882, Browne became a registered chemist in Tasmania. In 1882, Browne first worked with fellow dispensing chemist or pharmacist Henry Thomas Gould, at Harry Benjafield’s Homœopathic Pharmacy at Elizabeth- street in Hobart. Browne knew Gould from London, as they were friends and classmates at the Westminster College of Pharmacy. In October 1883, Browne became manager and dispensing chemist for Benjafield’s Homœopathic Pharmacy on Elizabeth-street at Launceston, Tasmania.
He became an assistant in the Lyon police's forensic lab, which had been set up in 1910 by Edmond Locard. He worked there over thirty years, becoming assistant director, and then director. At the end of December 1949. he opened a pharmacy (dispensing chemist) at Saint-Fons, where he trained many other pharmacists.
Sonny Carstairs: Anglo-Indian dispensing chemist who works at the foundation. Chatterjee Krishna: Social worker at the foundation. "Tarzan": Athletic street urchin who chose his name from the character in American movies and a friend of "Edward G. Robinson". "Edward G. Robinson": Disfigured street urchin who chose his name from the actor in American movies and a friend of "Tarzan".
Max Peiffer Watenphul was the son of Karl Josef Emil Peiffer, a dispensing chemist, and his wife Anna. His father died in 1903. Three years later, in 1906, his mother married Dr. Heinrich Watenphul, a master at the grammar school in Quedlinburg. His family lived there until 1911 before moving to Hattingen, a town on the River Ruhr, where Max's stepfather, who also wrote books on Middle Latin poetry, had been appointed headmaster of the local grammar school.
Edward Packard was born in 1843 at Saxmundham in Suffolk, the son of Edward Packard senior. He was educated at King's College, London and the Royal Agricultural College at Cirencester.Oxford D.N.B. He joined his father in business as a dispensing chemist at Bramford in 1866,Oxford D.N.B. and was an active member of Dr. John Taylor's Ipswich Science-Gossip Society from the late 1860s.Minute-Books of the Ipswich Science-Gossip Society 1869-75 (Suffolk Record Office, Ipswich) ref.
Alice Fanny Whyte (née Fallwell, 14 September 1877 – 3 July 1952) was a New Zealand artist. She exhibited under the names Alice Fallwell, Alice Whyte, and Alice F. Whyte. Born Alice Fanny Fallwell on 14 September 1877, Whyte was the daughter of Samuel Fallwell, a dispensing chemist, and Martha Ann Fallwell (née Wilkinson). The family lived in Papakura, South Auckland, and Whyte studied art at the Elam School of Fine Arts, travelling by train from Papakura every day.
Contrary to the wishes of his maternal relatives, who wanted him to become a clergyman in the established church, he chose the ministry of the Wesleyans, as his father had done. After spending a short time in the shop of a dispensing chemist in Macclesfield, he commenced the itinerancy in 1813, and soon became widely known as an eloquent and popular preacher. He had all the qualities of a true orator. He possessed a sweet and powerful voice, a fertile imagination, and much literary cultivation.
Ann Greenly (née Barnard; 8 June 1852 – 1 March 1927) was the fourth of five daughters of John Barnard of Bath, a dispensing chemist. She is known for her geological work assisting husband Edward Greenly in his surveying of Scotland and Anglesey, as well as being an accomplished artist and animal rights' representative. She died of heart failure on 1 March 1927, at the age of 75. The "Annie Greenly Fund" for detailed geological mapping was established in her honour by the Geological Society of London.
Almus is a brand of generic prescription drugs sold in five countries. Almus is an umbrella brand for the wide range of lower cost generic medicines, which was initially launched in the UK in 2003. Alliance Boots has placed considerable emphasis on the design of the packaging in an attempt to reduce the number errors by the dispensing chemist and by the patient relating to incorrect dosage which can result in either a dangerous accidental overdose or an equally dangerous under dose. Almus has won numerous awards for the design of their packaging and documentation.
Evans was born at 28 Icen Way (where there is now a memorial plaque, unveiled in 2013 by Tegen Evans, his great-great niece) in Dorchester, Dorset. He was the son of Laura (Turner) and Alfred Herbert Evans, a Welsh dispensing chemist and keen amateur actor who made adaptations of novels by Thomas Hardy for the local amateur company. Hardy lived in Dorchester and thought highly of Evans's adaptations and productions. Young Maurice made his first stage appearance as a small boy in Far from the Madding Crowd.
Almus placed considerable emphasis on the design of the packaging in an attempt to reduce the number of errors by the dispensing chemist and by the patient relating to incorrect dosage which can result in either a dangerous accidental overdose or an equally dangerous under dose. Walgreens has a self-branded line of products, "Well at Walgreens". In 2015, Walgreens Boots Alliance paid £140 million (about $250 million) for UK skincare brand Liz Earle Naturally Active, an Avon subsidiary since 2010.Liz Earle sells beauty business to Avon, Evening Standard, London, 25 March 2010 .
At this time Dr Upleigh discovered the notorious criminal Amahred Singh was hanging around the foundation and threatened him with the police. Lastly Fraulein Glucklick tells Ghote that the windows of the staff dining room are left open and on several occasions people have reached in to steal food (the implication is that someone could reach in to add poison). The next day Ghote interviews Sonny Carstairs, an Anglo-Indian dispensing chemist at the foundation. Carstairs notes that the preparation used to treat the skin disease of "Edward G. Robinson" contains arsenic.
In England an NHS patient is defined as rural if they live more than 1 mile (1.6 km) from either a doctor or a dispensing chemist. In Scotland a different definition of rural is used. This is important for defining whether the patient is expected to collect their own medicines. While doctors' surgeries in towns will not have a medicines dispensary instead expecting patients to use a high-street chemist to purchase their prescription medicines (in Scotland collection not purchase, as prescriptions are paid by the state), in rural village surgeries, an NHS medicines dispensary will be built into the same building.
John K. Smith (died 1845) was an American pharmacist and businessman, who was the founder of SmithKline as in GlaxoSmithKline Smith trained as a druggist, and joined his brother-in-law, John Gilbert, in 1830 to open a dispensing chemist at 296 North Second Street in Philadelphia.No brotherly love in battle of drug makers' jobs Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 17 February 1998 Together they sold drugs, paints, varnish, chemicals and window glass. When John K. Smith decided to retire he handed the business on to his son, George K. Smith, who expanded it into a large international business. John K. Smith died in 1845.
After training as a pharmacist at a dispensing chemist in Grantham and then at University College, London, Thomas Smith opened his own chemist's shop in Hull in 1856.The pharmaceutical industry: A guide to Historical Records By Lesley Richmond Ashgate, 2003, In 1858 he started selling cod-liver oil most of which came from Newfoundland although he obtained one large batch at a cheaper price from Norway: he sold these supplies to hospitals on a wholesale basis. In 1896 he was joined by his nephew, Horatio Nelson Smith, who helped build T.J. Smith & Nephew into a global medical supplies business. Thomas Smith died later in 1896.
There is also a GP's practice, and two public houses: the 18th-century coaching inn, The Crown Inn,Crown Inn Benson and the Three Horseshoes. (The number is down from five since 1990, the closed ones having become private homes.) There are about a dozen small shops, including a supermarket and a dispensing chemist. A large garage on the main Oxford road just outside the village has an on-site McDonald's (with drive-through) and a Marks and Spencer food outlet, but the Vauxhall main car dealership there has now closed. Aircraft noise in the area can be significant, which lowers property values compared with many of the surrounding villages.
The company was founded in 1856 by Thomas James Smith of Kingston upon Hull who went into business as a dispensing chemist. A few months before his death in 1896, Smith was joined by his nephew, Horatio Nelson Smith, and the business became known as T. J. Smith and Nephew. In 1928 the company acquired the licence to market and produce the Elastoplast range of bandages. By 1977 the company acquired the pump manufacturer Watson-Marlow Pumps, before selling it to Spirax-Sarco Engineering in 1990. In 1986 it went on to acquire Richards Medical Company, a US specialist in orthopaedic products for £201 million.
The area is considered to be broadly affluent, and is mostly residential with some commercial activity, especially around the junction of Ferry Road with Inverleith Row, such as a newsagent, a fishmonger, a dispensing chemist and an off-licence, plus some more specialist businesses such as a fishing tackle shop, and one of the UK's leading stamp shops. However the three bank branches (Bank of Scotland, Royal Bank of Scotland and TSB) that were previously situated in the area have all recently been closed. There are at least three sheltered housing communities. Goldenacre Sports Ground, located within the Goldenacre Playing Fields, has played a historic role in the development of Scottish rugby union.
The town plan for the town, drawn up in the 1930s by architect Carolus Lindberg was soon regarded as over-dimensioned, and Ekelund was given the task of redesigning it. His "modern" design was influenced by ideas from the Garden city movement, as interpreted in Finland by Otto-Iivari Meurman and its modern interpretation by Le Corbusier, with a particular emphasis on open spaces and parks. In the town Ekelund designed a dispensing chemist, the town hall, cemetery chapel, water tower, trade college and several schools and old-people's homes. Architectural competitions have been a common method in Finland for choosing designs for key public buildings, and Ekelund entered several of them over the length of his career.
The western part of the allotment, about , (later subdivision 1) was sold for to David Clarke, chemist and druggist of Warwick, and title was transferred to him in May 1868. Clarke, an Irish Protestant emigrant and dispensing chemist since , arrived in Warwick in 1867. During the next 15 years he played an important role in the development of agriculture in the Warwick district, at a period when powerful local pastoralists were still strongly opposed to opening the land to selection. Clarke actively promoted the expansion of agriculture on the southern Darling Downs, specialising in the importation of seeds (including cotton and Indian wheat) and fruit trees likely to succeed in the district.
It was laughable > to see men take a bottle out of their pocket, saying, "Have a nip, mate, > it's only five shillings a bottle?" The North Gregory Hotel in Winton as it looked in 1879 Winton was gazetted as a township on 12 July 1879. The entry in the government gazette said that the land area involved was two square miles (roughly 5.2 km2), resumed from the Doveridge No. 4 and Vindex No. 1 North runs. In 1879, Julius von Berger, who had fled Schleswig-Holstein to escape Prussian rule, became the town's first dispensing chemist (pharmacist). In 1880, Sub-Inspector Fred Murray and Sergeant Feltham came to town from Blackall and set up Winton's first police station in a small rented building.
UHU Adhesive In 1905, August Fischer, a dispensing chemist, purchased a small chemical plant aiming to manufacture inks, rubber stamp pads, paints and adhesives. In 1932, Fischer developed a clear synthetic resin adhesive which displayed the ability to affix any material. Following the custom of the time to name products in the writing goods sector after birds, Fischer named the glue UHU (pronounced "ooo-hoo", though in many English-speaking countries it is said "you-hoo") after Uhu, the onomatopeic German name for the eagle-owl, a bird which at the time could still be found in the Black Forest. There is an account of glue being used by British prisoners of war in Germany during WW2, and this is referred to by them as 'Uhu'.
By the end of the 19th century, the medical professions had taken on their current institutional form, with defined roles for physicians and surgeons, and the role of the apothecary was more narrowly conceived, as that of pharmacist (dispensing chemist in British English). In German speaking countries, such as Germany, Austria and Switzerland, pharmacies or chemist stores are still called apothecaries or in German Apotheken. The Apotheke ("store") is legally obligated to be run at all times by at least one Apotheker (male) or Apothekerin (female), who actually has an academic degree as a pharmacist —— in German Pharmazeut (male) or Pharmazeutin (female) — and has obtained the professional title Apotheker by either working in the field for numerous years — usually working in a pharmacy store — or taking additional exams. Thus a Pharmazeut is not always an Apotheker.

No results under this filter, show 25 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.