What's the difference between metallurgist and metallurgy?

Metallurgist


Definition:

  • (n.) One who works in metals, or prepares them for use; one who is skilled in metallurgy.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Diagnostic criteria of chronic bronchitis in metallurgists should be determined with consideration of concrete working conditions, endogenous factors of risk in the development of the disease and possible variants of the course.
  • (2) Nephritic functionality has been studies, making use of same nephritic enzymes dosage (NAG, AAP, alpha-glucosidase, lysozyme) in three groups of workers (varnishers, metallurgists, plastic manufacture employees) professionally exposed to nephritic damage, and in a control group made up of not professionally exposed to the same hazard subjects.
  • (3) Prophylactic treatment was carried out in 32 metallurgists suffering of gastroduodenal diseases.
  • (4) These microscopes were, at first, mainly used by physicists and metallurgists; but nowadays more and more biologists are interested in high voltage electron microscopy: they have obtained important and significant results.
  • (5) The results of the cytogenetic examination of metallurgists attest to the pronounced total mutagenic activity of unfavourable factors of the industrial environment, among which the key role is played by arsenic, fluorine and heavy metal compounds.
  • (6) This method makes it possible to realize adequate mental hygiene and psychoprophylactic programs in metallurgists of hot shops.
  • (7) Employment of clinico-psychological methods (BVNK-300) in metallurgists suffering of ulcer disease allowed to reveal several psychological aspects of the course of ulcer disease in this category of patients.
  • (8) Why, within 400 generations, we have gone from the scattered tribes of spear-carriers and fire-raisers who emerged from their caves at the end of the ice age to become the first farmers, metallurgists, urbanists, industrialists and now the seven billion inhabitants of a digitised, globalised world.
  • (9) A relationship was found of the influence of the age of metallurgists, length of work in hot shops and morbidity on the index of vegetative lability.
  • (10) Optimal correction of ametropia may be regarded as ophthalmoergonomic measure, being of great importance for improving visual capability to work in metallurgists.
  • (11) General physical fitness of metallurgists has been considerably lower as compared to the literature data.
  • (12) Metallurgists exposed to exceeding amounts of radiant heat and convection heat combined with the radiant one demonstrate such general physiologic adaptational mechanisms as: reflectory tachycardia, intensive sweating, heat conducting to the skin surface of the body, abruptly increased minute respiratory volume and possible filtrative sweating.
  • (13) Determination of the concentration of ionized calcium in the blood of metallurgists and miners with arterial hypertension (AN) revealed a tendency to reduction of calcemia that was more pronounced in high arterial pressure and low consumption of calcium with food.
  • (14) Food rations and 24-hour urinary excretion of calcium were evaluated in 1100 metallurgists and revealed a distinct relationship between low consumption of calcium with food due to reduced intake of milk products and the incidence of elevated arterial pressure levels.
  • (15) General physical fitness of 475 metallurgists, 203 subjects working under heat stress and 272 subjects working under normal environment conditions, has been determined.

Metallurgy


Definition:

  • (n.) The art of working metals, comprehending the whole process of separating them from other matters in the ore, smelting, refining, and parting them; sometimes, in a narrower sense, only the process of extracting metals from their ores.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In 1984 the press-fit condylar knee was first introduced and was intended to provide a condylar knee system primarily for posterior cruciate retention that addressed refinements in metallurgy, prosthetic geometry and sizing, cementless fixation, inventory management, and instrumentation.
  • (2) Thirteen of the 25 revisions required in the early series were due to stem fracture, a complication rarely seen now with improved stem design and superalloy metallurgy.
  • (3) The authors examined a group of pregnant women employed in metallurgy and in a control group.
  • (4) The physical and mechanical properties of samples of a nickel-base alloy fabricated by powder metallurgy were determined.
  • (5) It can also be used for many other applications, for example, in metallurgy, petrography and geostrategy.
  • (6) in length), having either conventional smooth surfaces (control) or porous surfaces (20 to 50 micron particle size) produced by powder metallurgy techniques, were positioned in the right atrial a-pendage.
  • (7) An economic evaluation is made on temporary disability because of disease of trauma, for a three-year period in one shop of technological plant for nonferrous metallurgy.
  • (8) Archaeological and anthropological studies of early developments in writing, music and metallurgy by ancient Peruvians and Persian peoples should be combined with PET-scan studies of their descendants to discover if, as preliminary archaeological data suggest, the two ancient populations differed on a genetic basis in higher brain functions, yet are indistinguishable as metallurgical engineers.
  • (9) Subjects rangedĀ from maths to metallurgy and modern languages.
  • (10) Metallurgical occupational hazards harm the health status in workers engaged into heat-treating metallurgy, induce the gastrointestinal disorders, which are demonstrated by the elevated transitory disablement.
  • (11) Basing on complex physiological and hygienic studies, the contributors propose an assessment of the work load of those engaged in the major professions in copper and nickel metallurgy.
  • (12) She grew up in Norilsk, a Siberian mining and metallurgy city that was once the centre of the Norillag gulag and one of the 10 most polluted places on earth.
  • (13) Transitory disablement in 5886 workers engaged for the whole year into heat treating metallurgy was compared during 5 years (1981-1985) with that in 291 workers engaged into repairing mechanical occupations so as to reveal metallurgical occupational factors influencing on gastrointestinal morbidity.
  • (14) Aluminium metal high-disperse dust presents a major health-affecting factor in aluminium powder metallurgy.
  • (15) In order to accurately evaluate copper exposure at working places where copper fume may arise (Metallurgy Department) it is necessary to determine Cu concentrations in respirable dust.
  • (16) These are as follows: ferrous metallurgy (5.21), metals producing industry (4.88), textile industry (4.83), chemical industry (4.63) and rubber processing industry (4.73).
  • (17) The origins of metallurgy stretch back nearly 4,000 years in South America.
  • (18) Working environment has been evaluated in two copper metallurgy plants by analysis of Cu and other metals (Pb, Cd, Zn) concentrations.
  • (19) Incidence of multiple myeloma was significantly increased for a number of occupational groups such as farmers, smelter and metallurgy workers, and miners-quarrymen-rock blasters.
  • (20) The attention is directed to regions with national industrial branches, most intensively polluting the atmospheric air (metallurgy, chemistry, petroleum-chemistry, cellulose-paper industry) and such, where the air pollution is related first of all to transport across the border-line.

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