Laureate in a sentence as a noun

True, except that the peace prize laureate is selected by the Norwegian Nobel Committee.

One of my clients has four or five employees with O visas and these people are all top of their field including a nobel laureate. You could easily be in the top 5% of your field and get rejected for an O.

Except the question was something that took a Nobel prize laureate to solve originally. No one can solve this stuff in a few minutes - you are selecting for actors."

Html by a Nobel laureate in physics who is a native speaker of Dutch, makes clear what the key learning task is to be a good physicist: "English is a prerequisite. If you haven't mastered it yet, learn it.

Nobel laureate Ralph Steinman had some of this kind of vaccines tested on himself when he got pancreatic tumor. He lived unusually long for this kind of tumor and died of pneumonia.

They are also partially responsible for the advent of LED lighting and they have financed the research of a future Nobel laureate.

Laureate in a sentence as an adjective

He held a honorific speech for nobel laureate Herta Mller at the Franz-Werfel human rights award. He was in Salvador de Bahia on invitation from the Goethe institute.

With the situation as it stands, I can only respond with our poet laureate Seferis' exasperated lament, "Everywhere I go, Greece wounds me".

Has any Nobel laureate defended the "hostage taking" ? Congress already controls both spending and taxation.

Org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/20... The extreme skepticism of my colleagues led me to believe that I might never be funded to perform the crucial trial of antibiotics...

Com/news/nobel-laureate-challenges-psychol... The actual article is worth a read, I was a little intimidated after reading "heres some overmatter that didnt make it into the piece because of length" but the actual article is only 712 words.

The Nobel laureate profiled in this article researches biology, and has won the Nobel prize for medicine and physiology. You would hope that research on medicine, of all subjects, would be published in journals that never make mistakes, but Science, arguably the most prestigious journal in the world, definitely published a mistaken article about cell biology quite recently,[1] so we have to wonder how well even the most prestigious journal does peer review of what it publishes.

Laureate definitions

noun

someone honored for great achievements; figuratively someone crowned with a laurel wreath

adjective

worthy of the greatest honor or distinction; "The nation's pediatrician laureate is preparing to lay down his black bag"- James Traub