| beadle | 1. A messenger or crier of a court; a servitor; one who cites or bids persons to appear and answer; called also an apparitor or summoner. 2. An officer in a university, who precedes public processions of officers and students. In this sense the archaic spellings bedel (Oxford) and bedell (Cambridge) are preserved. 3. An inferior parish officer in England having a variety of duties, as the preservation of order in church service, the chastisement of petty offenders, etc. Origin: OE. Bedel, bidel, budel, OF. Bedel, F. Bedeau, fr. OHG. Butil, putil, G. Buttel, fr. OHG. Biotan, G. Bieten, to bid, confused with AS. Bydel, the same word as OHG. Butil. See. Bid. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| Beadle, George | <person> An American geneticist who won the Nobel Prize in 1958 with Edward Tatum for showing that genes are responsible for controlling the production of enzymes. Lived: 1903-1991. (13 Nov 1997) |
| Beadle |
a minor parish official who serves as an usher and preserves order at services United States biologist who discovered how hereditary characteristics are transmitted by genes (1903-1989)
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| beadle | a minor parish official who serves as an usher and preserves order at services |
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| beadle | United States biologist who discovered how hereditary characteristics are transmitted by genes (1903-1989) |
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