Definition of Schwendener. Meaning of Schwendener. Synonyms of Schwendener

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Schwendener. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Schwendener and, of course, Schwendener synonyms and on the right images related to the word Schwendener.

Definition of Schwendener

No result for Schwendener. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Schwendener from wikipedia

- Simon Schwendener (10 February 1829 – 27 May 1919) was a Swiss botanist who was a native of Buchs in the Canton of St. Gallen. In 1856 he received his...
- American band formed in New York in 1993 by Lawrence Chandler and Martha Schwendener. They released three albums between 1995 and 2000, including the critically...
- hybridisation. She did not believe in the theory of symbiosis proposed by Simon Schwendener, the German mycologist, as previously thought; instead, she proposed...
- Michel Basquiat and helped him with his artwork in the studio. Martha Schwendener, writing in the New York Times, makes light of this and Prol's artistic...
- University of Berlin as a student of August Wilhelm Eichler and Simon Schwendener, and at the University of Jena, where he served as an ****istant to plant...
- Martha Schwendener Lawrence Chandler – programming, sampling, scratching, b**** guitar, guitar, keyboards, drums, string arrangement Martha Schwendener – vocals...
- by Ad Vitam in French cinemas. In his review at outnow.ch, Giancarlo Schwendener writes that Léa Todorov has succeeded in creating a hussar's play, and...
- sweeping, concerned, intimate, honest." In The New York Times, Martha Schwendener wrote: "What is interesting, beyond the haunting, complicated beauty...
- for quite some time, it was not until 1867, when Swiss botanist Simon Schwendener proposed his dual theory of lichens, that lichens are a combination of...
- Berlin. In his studies he was influenced by instructors such as Simon Schwendener (1829–1919), Friedrich Wilhelm Zopf (1846–1909) and Johannes Reinke (1849–1931)...