curie$1$ - translation to french
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curie$1$ - translation to french

WRITER, JOURNALIST AND PIANIST, YOUNGER DAUGHTER OF MARIE AND PIERRE CURIE
Eve Curie LaBouisse; Eve Curie; Eve Curie Labouisse; Éve Curie
  • Ève, Marie and Irene Curie in 1908

curie      
n. curia, place where the senate met in ancient Rome; tribal divisions in ancient Rome; medieval judge's council; curie, unit for measuring radioactivity (named after Pierre Curie)

Definition

curie
['kj??ri]
(abbrev.: Ci)
¦ noun (plural curies) a unit of radioactivity, corresponding to 3.7 . 1010 disintegrations per second.
?the quantity of radioactive substance that emits one curie of activity.
Origin
early 20th cent.: named after the French physicists Pierre and Marie Curie.

Wikipedia

Ève Curie

Ève Denise Curie Labouisse (French pronunciation: ​[ɛv dəniz kyʁi labwis]; December 6, 1904 – October 22, 2007) was a French and American writer, journalist and pianist. Ève Curie was the younger daughter of Marie Skłodowska-Curie and Pierre Curie. Her sister was Irène Joliot-Curie and her brother-in-law Frédéric Joliot-Curie. She worked as a journalist and authored her mother's biography Madame Curie and a book of war reportage, Journey Among Warriors. From the 1960s she committed herself to work for UNICEF, providing help to children and mothers in developing countries. Ève was the only member of her family who did not choose a career as a scientist and did not win a Nobel Prize, although her husband, Henry Richardson Labouisse Jr., did collect the Nobel Peace Prize in 1965 on behalf of UNICEF, completing the Curie family legacy of five Nobel Prize winners.