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The word 'chemist' is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to a person who specializes in the science of chemistry, such as a pharmacologist or a person who works in a pharmacy. For example, "The chemist gave us detailed instructions on how to take the medication."
Dictionary
chemist
noun
A person who specializes in the science of chemistry, especially at a professional level.
Exact(60)
The play – based on the story of the chemist Clara Immerwahr, who killed herself after the poison gas invented by her husband, Fritz Haber, was used for mass murder in the first world war – is the most ambitious yet by a director famous for daring productions.
There's also a sample at Cardiff University, where Andrew Westwell, a brilliant chemist at the WEDINOS project, a Welsh government-funded initiative that tracks and identifies new drugs.
A former sales assistant in an Easington chemist, she is now retired, aged 63, and lives in South Hetton, Co Durham.
In the chemist, Lydia, with no sense of irony, asks for a new toothbrush and some children's mouthwash that she saw advertised on the television.
I get the nice man in the chemist to tell her she doesn't need the mouthwash – she just needs to brush her teeth properly.
"They think they own all the public spaces," said chemist Luz Maria Velazquez, 54. "It is a violation of our rights, because one group can't decide for everybody.
So should we stick to the local chemist?
Chemist and X-ray crystallographer (1920-1958) Suggested by guface and J_smudger Another unsung hero not on the list is English chemist and X-ray crystallographer Rosalind Franklin.
"There's a gap in our understanding of the decomposition process in Australia," said Professor Shari Forbes, a chemist and professor of forensic medicine at the University of Technology, Sydney, who will run the facility.
Goffin was born in Brooklyn in 1939 and was working as a chemist when he met King at Queens College.
A scientific journal, Climatic Change, published a series of papers on the subject in August, including one by Paul Crutzen, a Nobel-prize-winning atmospheric chemist.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com