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muller
1[muhl-er]
noun
an implement of stone or other substance with a flat base for grinding paints, powders, etc., on a slab of stone or the like.
any of various mechanical devices for grinding.
muller
2[muhl-er]
Muller
3[myoo-ler, muhl-er, mil-]
noun
Hermann Joseph, 1890–1967, U.S. geneticist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1946.
ü
4[muhl-er, my-luh
noun
Johann Regiomontanus.
Johannes Peter 1801–58, German physiologist and comparative anatomist.
K. Alex Karl Alexander ü, 1927–2023, Swiss physicist who, with J. Georg Bednorz, discovered superconductivity in ceramic materials: shared Nobel Prize in Physics 1987.
Max Friedrich Max ü, 1823–1900, English Sanskrit scholar and philologist born in Germany.
Wilhelm Johann Ludwig Wilhelm ü, 1794–1827, German lyric poet noted for poems that became the basis of works by Franz Schubert and other composers.
ü
1/ ˈə /
noun
Friedrich Max (ˈfriːdrɪç maks). 1823–1900, British Sanskrit scholar born in Germany
Johann (joˈhan). See Regiomontanus
Johannes Peter (joˈhanəs ˈpeːtər). 1801–58, German physiologist, anatomist, and experimental psychologist
Paul Hermann (paul ˈhɛrman). 1899–1965, Swiss chemist. He synthesized DDT (1939) and discovered its use as an insecticide: Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1948
Muller
2/ ˈʌə /
noun
Hermann Joseph. 1890–1967, US geneticist, noted for his work on the transmutation of genes by X-rays: Nobel prize for physiology or medicine 1946
muller
3/ ˈʌə /
noun
a flat heavy implement of stone or iron used to grind material against a slab of stone
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of muller1
Example Sentences
Many of the Democratic candidates or mullers are personifications of the contemporary phenomenon that the presidency can be an entry-level job.
I remember seeing Thomas muller joking with the referee midway through the second half while deadlocked against an organized Swedish side, and thinking where was the passion?
Two Seans - one from Bristol and the other from Leeds - both write that muller is an old English Romany word meaning "to kill", and the word mulla means corpse.
But muller does not refer to the player Gerd Muller, however much he stands out in the unfinished story of the great game that is England v Germany.
You're never going to make decent wine from muller or Bacchus.
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