Monod


[maw-noh] /mɔˈnoʊ/

noun
1.
Jacques
[zhahk] /ʒɑk/ (Show IPA), 1910–76, French chemist: Nobel prize 1965.

Monod Mo·nod (mô-nō’), Jacques Lucien. 1910-1976.

French biochemist. He shared a 1965 Nobel Prize for the study of regulatory activity in body cells.
Monod
(mô-nō’)
French biochemist who, with François Jacob, proposed the existence of messenger RNA. Monod and Jacob also studied how genes control cellular activity by directing the synthesis of proteins.

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    [mon-uh-dak-tl-uh s] /ˌmɒn əˈdæk tl əs/ adjective, Zoology. 1. having only one digit or claw. /ˌmɒnəʊˈdæktɪləs/ adjective 1. (of certain animals) having a single functional digit

  • Monodactyly

    [mon-uh-dak-tl-uh s] /ˌmɒn əˈdæk tl əs/ adjective, Zoology. 1. having only one digit or claw. /ˌmɒnəʊˈdæktɪləs/ adjective 1. (of certain animals) having a single functional digit monodactyly mon·o·dac·ty·ly (mŏn’ō-dāk’tə-lē) n. The presence of a single finger on the hand or a single toe on the foot.

  • Monodermoma

    monodermoma mon·o·der·mo·ma (mŏn’ō-dər-mō’mə) n. A neoplasm composed of tissues from a single germ layer.

  • Monodiplopia

    monodiplopia mon·o·di·plo·pi·a (mŏn’ō-dĭ-plō’pē-ə) n. See monocular diplopia.

  • Monodisperse

    /ˌmɒnəʊdɪsˈpɜːs/ adjective 1. (chem) (of a colloidal system) having particles of similar size


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