| Thomas-White hypothesis |
[Clayton Thomas, b. 1921, U.S. physician; Arthur White, b. 1925, U.S. physician] The hypothesis that there will eventually be reported a congenital abnormality in which a fetus has two umbilici.
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| Thomas |
a famous inventor who created the electric light bulb, phonograph, and movie projector in the decades before 1900. Edison is important because he represents the birth of a systematic approach to inventing things. He held more than a thousand patents. The electric light (1879) changed the look of American cities, and created an entire industry to supply electric power. Edison's laboratory was in Menlo Park, New Jersey. It ushered in the modern idea of a
Ãâó: www.fasttrackteaching.com/termsgilded.html
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| Thomas |
(c.1472-1530) English cardinal. More a statesman than a churchman, Wolsey was active in foreign policy in a bold attempt to make England preeminent in Europe and was involved in King Henry VIII's attempts to secure a papal dispensation for divorce.
Ãâó: www.religionfacts.com/christianity/glossary.htm
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| Thomas |
One of the Philadelphia school of cabinet-makers of the mid-18th-century in America. He was known for his highboys and lowboys, and chairs, which were executed in big Georgian, and early Chippendale styles.
Ãâó: www.tvdecorators.com/infopages/dictionary.html
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| Thomas |
Captain, pilot of USAF, died in strange circumstances while chasing a UFO in the daily sky of Kentucky following the orders of his commando (1948). The first accident of this kind, suggesting hostility from UFO pilots.
Ãâó: www.ufopsi.com/ufoglossary/glossary_M.html
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