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Watson English

Meaning Watson meaning

What does Watson mean?

Watson

United States geneticist who (with Crick in 1953) helped discover the helical structure of DNA (born in 1928) United States telephone engineer who assisted Alexander Graham Bell in his experiments (1854-1934) United States psychologist considered the founder of behavioristic psychology (1878-1958)

Synonyms Watson synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Watson?

Examples Watson examples

How do I use Watson in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Baffled by Sherlock Holmes' cryptic remarks, Watson wondered whether Holmes was intentionally concealing his thoughts about the crime.
Elementary, my dear Watson.
My dear Watson, you would confer a great favour upon me by coming. And I think that your time will not be misspent, for there are points about the case which promise to make it an absolutely unique one.
It's this way, Watson.
Come along, Watson. This is the house.
He is the Napoleon of crime, Watson.
What do you think of this, Watson?

Movie subtitles

Come on, Dr. Watson, let's go places.
And this is Sheriff Watson.
Of course, my dear Watson.
My theory, my dear Watson, is that we are in very deep waters indeed.
I don't know. I'm only Watson.
For that, my dear Watson, you shall have a trichinopoly cigar.
Watson would you have any objection to drawing the blinds casually as if you were alone in this room?
Watson I think you know me well enough to understand that I am by no means a nervous man.
Watson, might I have a match?
He is the Napoleon of crime Watson.
It would give me great pleasure Watson if you would come onto the continent with me. The continent?
We are now playing a double-handed game with me. Watson against the most powerful syndicate of criminals in Europe.
My dear Watson you haven't even condescended to say good morning to me.
I did rather fine, Watson.
Good luck, Watson.
Elementary, my dear Watson.
Nobody asked you, Watson.
And Dr. Watson is with him. Well, come on!
Yes. Did anyone doubt that you're Mr. Watson?
Yes, but Dr. Watson probably. He did from time to time. If I'm not mistaken.
You are mistaken, Watson. He followed the master's example in every regard.
Elementary, my dear Watson!
Thank you, thank you, Dr. Watson!
And my friend not Dr. Watson, but.
No Sherlock Holmes and no Dr. Watson.
And Dr. Watson is with him as well.
And this is Sheriff Watson. You've got to be polite to him.
And Dr. Watson is with him.
You are mistaken, Watson.
Worthy of Sherlock Holmes! Thank you, thank you, Dr. Watson!
But trying to make people believe I was Dr. Watson, was obviously a mistake. -You think so? For sure. I'm the mistake.
Goodbye, Dr. Watson.

News and current affairs

These events appear to be more than just larger versions of the more frequent small fluctuations that we often see, and that Stock and Watson analyzed.
Watson is right that questioning this assumption is not, in itself, racist.
That is precisely what Watson has now admitted he did.
The Science Museum cancelled a lecture Watson was to give about his book and his career.
Rockefeller University also cancelled a lecture that Watson had been scheduled to give.
If so, one can only hope that watching how Watson blew himself up will not discourage them from venturing into the minefield.
This brings us to the importance of stories - and very far from the kind of statistical analysis exemplified by Stock and Watson.
Fifty years ago, on April 25, 1953, James Watson and Francis Crick published a short letter in the science magazine Nature.
It was only natural that where chemistry fell short, physics--and its premier laboratory--showed the way forward, a way grasped by Watson and Crick in the epic breakthrough that we celebrate this month.
LONDON - Fifty-one years ago, James Watson, Maurice Wilkins, and Francis Crick were awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine for their discovery of DNA's structure - a breakthrough that heralded the age of the gene.
Tom Watson, Jr., who led IBM through decades of strong growth, is known for having supported brilliant blunders.
In October, James Watson, who shared the 1962 Nobel Prize for his description of the structure of DNA, was in London to promote his memoir, Avoid Boring People and Other Lessons From a Life in Science.
The speakers at these events will presumably have better credentials than Watson to discuss topics like race and intelligence.
LONDON - On April 25, 1953, Francis Crick and James Watson published a one-page paper that many believed would revolutionize biological research.

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