How to use in-sentence of “laboratory”:
+ After moving to Kyiv at the invitation of Academician Oleksandr Bogomolets, from 1940, for 25 years, Vasyl Pavlovych headed the endocrinology laboratory of the Institute of Experimental Biology and Pathology, which was later reorganized into the Bogomolets Institute of Physiology Bogomolets under the USSR Academy of Sciences.
+ The bacteria on the cotton are then grown in a laboratory where scientists can identify them using a microscope.
+ It does not react with most household or laboratory chemicals.
+ Fullerton brought New York Yankees player Babe Ruth to a psychology laboratory at Columbia University.
+ Per chance and with the badly equipped laboratory he had at that time, he discovered that in this distillery, two fermentations were taking place, a lactic acid one and an alcoholic one, both induced by microorganisms.
+ In the spring of 2000, Alsterdal bought Alfred Nobel’s former laboratory in Vinterviken, Stockholm and ran her own cabaret theatre with her ex husband.
+ HAL Laboratory is a video game developer and a second party second party to Nintendo.
+ The Advanced Light Source at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, CaliforniaBerkeley, California is a synchrotron light source.

Example sentences of “laboratory”:
+ He wrote a poem called The Laboratory which was about a woman using poison to murderkill her lover’s girlfriend.
+ In mammals, only the zygote and early embryonic cells are totipotent, while in plants many differentiated cells can become totipotent with simple laboratory techniques.
+ It is a major medical research laboratory with a broad focus.
+ In addition to these programs, CMS has other responsibilities, including the administrative simplification standards from the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 through its survey and certification process, clinical laboratory quality standards under the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments, and oversight of HealthCare.gov.
+ In 1976–1980 she studied dental laboratory at the Secondary Medical School in Prague.
+ The eggs are fertilised in the laboratory by the father’s sperm.
+ In what became the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Kendrew determined the structure of the protein myoglobin, which stores oxygen in muscle cells.
+ Estimated lifespan of the HD-Rosetta analog disc, an Focused ion beamion beam-etched writing medium on nickel plate, a technology developed at Los Alamos National Laboratory and later commercialized.
+ They put the proteins inside the bodies of laboratory mice using a microneedle array, meaning a small patch with about 400 tiny needles made out of other protein and sugar.
+ Queen Christina had an alchemical laboratory in Riario palace attended by people like the esotericists “Giuseppe Francesco Borri”, and the learned Athanasius Kircher possessor of the mysterious Voynich manuscript of enigmatic scripture full of magic symbols.
+ His laboratory group concluded that there is no “safe” threshold below which radiation is not harmful.
+ In 1897, he got a scholarship, allowing him to enter the botanical laboratory of Philippe Van Tieghem at the National Museum of Natural History.
+ Henderson has worked at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge since 1973, and was its director between 1996 and 2006.
+ On the door was transcribed the secret formula for producing gold discovery in those years in alchemical laboratory of queen Christina.
+ AutoIt has been used in low-cost laboratory automation.
+ It can be made in the laboratory by reacting manganese dioxide with hydrochloric acid.
+ Among his other accomplishments are helping to found the United States Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory and Fermilab.
+ He wrote a poem called The Laboratory which was about a woman using poison to murderkill her lover's girlfriend.
+ In mammals, only the zygote and early embryonic cells are totipotent, while in plants many differentiated cells can become totipotent with simple laboratory techniques.
+ It is a major medical research laboratory with a broad focus.
More in-sentence examples of “laboratory”:
+ The main site of the CERN, a European particle physics laboratory is in Meyrin.
+ In 1993, he was made Professor at the laboratory for low temperature physics of the Technical University of Helsinki, but still worked at the Landau Institute.
+ A laboratory thermometer is a tool used in laboratories to measure temperature with high accuracy.
+ He was an important part because not only was he the first sports psychologist but he also opened the first laboratory in America that studied the relationship between sports and psychology.
+ Professor Smoot began to study cosmology, and went to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory where he worked with Luis Walter Alvarez on the experiment HAPPE, a high up weather balloon for detecting antimatter in the upper atmosphere.
+ The area has been described as a natural laboratory for studying the evolution of the eucalypts.
+ To me, this looks like a listing of laboratory equiment which is supposedly present in most chemical laboratories.
+ A Bunsen burner is a common piece of laboratory equipment.
+ This contrasts with classical genetics, which works mostly on crosses between laboratory strains, and DNA sequence analysis, which studies genes at the molecular level.
+ Thioethers can be made in the laboratory by the chemical reactionreaction of a thiol with a base and an electrophile.
+ He was the founder of The Brassica Chemoprotection Laboratory for the study of edible plants that creates protective enzyme activity in the body and may help prevent the development of cancer.
+ In 1952 Teller opened Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory at the University of California with Ernest Lawrence.
+ He then became a Fellow at the Laboratory of Molecular Biology at the University of Cambridge, England.
+ There are also laboratory tongs, which are used to grip objects that are kind of, but not very poisonous.
+ This remains an excellent approximation for everyday life and even most laboratory work.
+ Round-bottom flasks are types of Laboratory flaskflasks having spherical bottoms used as laboratory glassware.
+ Simple systems can be settled in the laboratory to collect gas or to compress it.
+ With “Drosophila melanogaster”, wild type usually means the standard version of the famous laboratory population used in the T.H.
+ During World War II he left Cambridge and volunteered as a hospital porter in Guy’s Hospital in London and as a laboratory assistant in Newcastle upon Tyne’s Royal Victoria Infirmary.
+ He was Director of the Lightwave Devices Laboratory of Bell Labs.
+ On July 11, a low-pressure zone was formed near the Mariana Islands, and the US Naval Research Laboratory gave it a tropical disturbance number of 98W.
+ Many laboratory methods exist for the organic synthesis of arenes from non-arene precursors.
+ In the early 1950s, the young Havel entered a four-year apprenticeship as a chemical laboratory assistant.
+ Later he worked in elementary particle physics, mainly in West Germany and he helped the foundation of the European Laboratory for Elementary Particle Physics CERN in Geneva, Switzerland.
+ In 2007 the British Biochemical Society was given a grant by the Wellcome Trust to catalogue and preserve the 35 laboratory notebooks in which Sanger recorded his remarkable research from 1944 to 1983.
+ The main site of the CERN, a European particle physics laboratory is in Meyrin.
+ In 1993, he was made Professor at the laboratory for low temperature physics of the Technical University of Helsinki, but still worked at the Landau Institute.
+ A new laboratory built in 1923 allowed Zeeman to continue to study the Zeeman effect.
+ He served as Director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory for 25 years from 1945 to 1970.
+ A graduated cylinder is a piece of laboratory glassware used to measurementmeasure the volume of liquids.
+ The laboratory copying of a molecule to produce exact copies is also called cloning.
+ Roentgenium belongs to this group of elements based on its electron configurationelectronic configuration, but it is a short-lived half-life that has only been observed in laboratory conditions.
+ A laboratory is a work place where sciencescientific research, experiments, or measurement are done.
+ It is made in the laboratory by reacting thallium sulfate with hydrogen sulfide or by heating thallium and sulfur together.
+ There are many different types of laboratory flasks.
+ Today laboratory instruments are capable of containing and observing individual electrons.
+ The game begins with Dexter’s rival, Mandark, breaking into Dexter’s laboratory and attempting to destroy it by reprogramming the lab’s Computer to block Dexter from entering.
+ Research on animals has shown that compulsive sexual behavior uses the same mechanism of action that is also responsible for drug addiction in laboratory animals.
+ The researchers used laboratory equipment to make pieces of the same proteins that are in SARS-CoV-2.
+ The best-documented creations of new species in the laboratory were performed in the late 1980s.
+ In December 2015, a laboratory is created.
+ During World War II, a laboratory there was a part of the Manhattan Project.
+ In February and March 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic that started in late 2019, health authorities in Poland began laboratory testing of suspected cases of infection by SARS-CoV-2, one of the seven known human coronaviruses, as well as home quarantining and monitoring.
+ A Performing Arts Centre, Digital Language Laboratory and Hospitality Centre on the Broadmeadows Campus are just a few recent additions to the College.
+ In laboratory experiments, octopuses can be readily trained to distinguish between different shapes and patterns.
+ In 1876 Edison used the money from his inventions to start his own laboratory in Menlo Park, New Jersey.
+ Most notable were the Stanford Linear Accelerator, which sent particles in a straight line, the Brookhaven National Laboratory at SUNY Stoney Brook and the Cornell University synchrotron, which sent particles around in a circle to have the same magnets work on the particles many times.
+ If a chemical synthesis starts from basic laboratory compounds and yields something new, it is a “purely synthetic process”.
+ He was Professor Emeritus and Director of Hydro-Pneumatic Power Laboratory at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.
+ Her team was successful in demonstrating dynamical tunnelling in the Bose Einstein Condensate Laboratory in a modulated standing wave.
