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Constantin Fahlberg

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126: 27: 134: 71:, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Knowledge. 146: 57: 74:
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Knowledge article at ]; see its history for attribution.
258: 174: 104: 90: 39: 111: 238: 233: 8: 166: 86: 150: 125: 133: 181:(1846–1927, aged 81). Later Fahlberg gave this chemical "body" the trade name 227: 216: 210: 204: 198: 162: 178: 93:
to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
182: 170: 68: 158: 165:) was a Russian chemist who discovered the sweet taste of 220:. Four patents by Fahlberg on the synthesis of saccharin. 129:
Cenotaph for Constantin Fahlberg in Magdeburg, Germany
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in 1877–78 when analysing the chemical compounds in
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a machine-translated version of the German article.
225: 89:accompanying your translation by providing an 51:Click for important translation instructions. 38:expand this article with text translated from 132: 124: 226: 101:{{Translated|de|Constantin Fahlberg}} 20: 13: 167:anhydroorthosulphaminebenzoic acid 14: 270: 191: 254:Expatriates in the German Empire 249:Expatriates in the United States 244:Chemists from the Russian Empire 137:Signature of Constantin Fahlberg 25: 99:You may also add the template 1: 7: 16:Russian chemist (1850–1910) 10: 275: 63:Machine translation, like 154: 40:the corresponding article 175:Johns Hopkins University 110:For more guidance, see 157:; 22 December 1850 in 138: 130: 136: 128: 112:Knowledge:Translation 83:copyright attribution 161:– 15 August 1910 in 217:U.S. patent 564,784 211:U.S. patent 496,113 205:U.S. patent 496,112 199:U.S. patent 326,281 155:Константин Фальберг 142:Constantin Fahlberg 259:Russian scientists 139: 131: 91:interlanguage link 123: 122: 52: 48: 266: 219: 213: 207: 201: 156: 149: 102: 96: 69:Google Translate 50: 46: 29: 28: 21: 274: 273: 269: 268: 267: 265: 264: 263: 224: 223: 215: 209: 203: 197: 194: 188: 145: 119: 118: 117: 100: 94: 53: 30: 26: 17: 12: 11: 5: 272: 262: 261: 256: 251: 246: 241: 236: 222: 221: 193: 192:External links 190: 177:for Professor 121: 120: 116: 115: 108: 97: 75: 72: 61: 54: 35: 34: 33: 31: 24: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 271: 260: 257: 255: 252: 250: 247: 245: 242: 240: 237: 235: 232: 231: 229: 218: 212: 206: 200: 196: 195: 189: 186: 184: 180: 176: 172: 168: 164: 160: 152: 148: 143: 135: 127: 113: 109: 106: 98: 92: 88: 84: 80: 76: 73: 70: 66: 62: 59: 56: 55: 49: 43: 41: 36:You can help 32: 23: 22: 19: 187: 141: 140: 87:edit summary 78: 45: 37: 18: 239:1910 deaths 234:1850 births 228:Categories 179:Ira Remsen 47:(May 2010) 183:Saccharin 147:‹See Tfd› 105:talk page 42:in German 171:coal tar 81:provide 151:Russian 103:to the 85:in the 44:. 163:Nassau 159:Tambov 65:DeepL 214:and 79:must 77:You 58:View 173:at 67:or 230:: 208:, 202:, 185:. 153:: 144:( 114:. 107:.

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‹See Tfd›
Russian
Tambov
Nassau
anhydroorthosulphaminebenzoic acid
coal tar
Johns Hopkins University
Ira Remsen
Saccharin
U.S. patent 326,281
U.S. patent 496,112
U.S. patent 496,113
U.S. patent 564,784
Categories
1850 births
1910 deaths
Chemists from the Russian Empire
Expatriates in the United States
Expatriates in the German Empire

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