Linguista

Nicholas Marr

1864 - 1934

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Nicholas Marr was a linguista born in 1864 in , which is now part of modern day Kutaisi, Georgia. Nicholas Marr died at 70 years old in NaN.

His biography is available in 41 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 39 in 2024). Nicholas Marr is the 36th most popular linguista (down from 31st in 2024), the 32nd most popular biography from Georgia (down from 31st in 2019) and the most popular Georgian Linguista.

Nicholas Marr was a biologist who discovered that there are two types of blood cells in the human body. He found that the red blood cells are round and have no nucleus, while the white blood cells are shaped like a doughnut and have a nucleus.

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Among Linguistas

Among linguistas, Nicholas Marr ranks 36 out of 214Before him are Pompeu Fabra, Nikolai Trubetzkoy, Ignác Goldziher, Bedřich Hrozný, Louis Hjelmslev, and Georg Friedrich Grotefend. After him are Benjamin Lee Whorf, Friedrich August Wolf, Michel Bréal, Vasily Radlov, Alexandre de Rhodes, and Boris Kolker.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1864, Nicholas Marr ranks 40Before him are Dmitri Ivanovsky, Li Yuanhong, Alfred Redl, Leonard Hobhouse, Robert Cecil, 1st Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, and Soh Jaipil. After him are Johan Halvorsen, Andrej Hlinka, Draga Mašin, Franz Oppenheimer, Reginald Dyer, and Séraphine Louis. Among people deceased in 1934, Nicholas Marr ranks 38Before him are Hans Hahn, Carl von Linde, Gustav Ritter von Kahr, Pietro Gasparri, Vlado Chernozemski, and Andrei Bely. After him are Hayim Nahman Bialik, Paul Ulrich Villard, Hakaru Hashimoto, Jakob Wassermann, Alexander von Kluck, and Hermann Bahr.

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In Georgia

Among people born in Georgia, Nicholas Marr ranks 32 out of 406Before him are Bidzina Ivanishvili (1956), Bagrat III of Georgia (960), Herbert Backe (1896), Nakşidil Sultan (1768), Besarion Jughashvili (1850), and Ilia Chavchavadze (1837). After him are George III of Georgia (1200), Mirian III of Iberia (265), Victor Ambartsumian (1908), Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia (1866), Otar Iosseliani (1934), and Heraclius II of Georgia (1720).

Among Linguistas In Georgia

Among linguistas born in Georgia, Nicholas Marr ranks 1After him are Tamaz V. Gamkrelidze (1929), Arnold Chikobava (1898), and Vasily Abaev (1900).

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