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Kendall
[ken-dl]
noun
Edward Calvin, 1886–1972, U.S. biochemist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1950.
a male given name.
Kendall
/ ˈɛԻə /
noun
Edward Calvin. 1886–1972, US biochemist, who isolated the hormone thyroxine (1916). He shared the Nobel prize for physiology or medicine (1950) with Phillip Hench and Tadeus Reichstein for their work on hormones
Example Sentences
Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall is making changes to her package of welfare reforms in an attempt to reassure Labour MPs who are considering rebelling against the plans.
It’s a classic heist-plot move — the script that becomes real, the guy who gets in over his head — but what makes this episode special is that it isn’t really about Kendall.
Speaking to the Mirror, Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall said: "We will publish that strategy and set out how we will pay for it and you will, I'm afraid, have to wait."
Kendall argues that the decrease in Neets represents "progress", but she is "determined to change" the overall number which remains high.
Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall has said welfare changes are "never easy and rarely popular, perhaps especially for Labour governments" but that she would not "resile" from difficult decisions.
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