The word biologist is a noun. The plural form is biologists.
Louis Pasteur was a famous French biologist.
The root "bio" in biologist comes from the Greek word "bios," which means life or living.
the word biologst is someone who studies the earth. the word marine means ocean. so a marine biologist is someone who studies the ocean.
The biologist studied the behavior of ants in the rainforest to better understand their social structure and communication methods.
There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".
The word is spelt just as you have in the question.
Legis
If you mean who proposed the idea of naming living things with two-word names derived (mostly) from Latin, that was Swedish biologist Carl von Linné (1707-1788), better known by the Latinized version of his name as Carolus Linnaeus.
The Latin word for yeast is "fermentum".The Latin word for yeast is "fermentum".The Latin word for yeast is "fermentum".The Latin word for yeast is "fermentum".The Latin word for yeast is "fermentum".The Latin word for yeast is "fermentum".The Latin word for yeast is "fermentum".The Latin word for yeast is "fermentum".The Latin word for yeast is "fermentum".
Biologist Ecologist
The English word arachnid derived in 1806 from the French word arachnide OR the Modern Latin Arachnida, as introduced for the name of the class of arthropods in 1815 by French biologist Jean Baptiste Pierre Antione de Monet de Lamarck (1744-1829), from the Greek wordarakhne, meaning "spider", also cognate with the Latin word aranea, meaning "spider, spider's web", from aracsna.