Definition of lawrencium in English:
 lawrencium
noun lɒˈrɛnsɪəmˌlɔˈrɛn(t)siəm
mass nounThe chemical element of atomic number 103, a radioactive metal of the actinide series. Lawrencium does not occur naturally and was first made by bombarding californium with boron nuclei.
 Example sentencesExamples
-  No one could really argue with the choice of lawrencium for element 103, after the man who had invented the machine for element synthesis.
 -  In 1968, Thiorso and associates at Berkeley used a few atoms of this isotope to study the oxidation behavior of lawrencium.
 -  Actinides - the radioactive chemical elements that span from actinium to lawrencium on the periodic table - have generated a great deal of interest in recent years.
 -  Due to its short half-life, there's no reason for considering the effects of lawrencium in the environment.
 -  Only a few atoms of lawrencium have ever been made.
 
Origin
  
1960s: modern Latin, named after the American physicist E. O. Lawrence (see Lawrence, Ernest Orlando), who founded the laboratory in which it was produced.
   Definition of lawrencium in US English:
 lawrencium
nounˌlôˈren(t)sēəmˌlɔˈrɛn(t)siəm
The chemical element of atomic number 103, a radioactive metal of the actinide series. Lawrencium does not occur naturally and was first made by bombarding californium with boron nuclei.
 Example sentencesExamples
-  Due to its short half-life, there's no reason for considering the effects of lawrencium in the environment.
 -  Only a few atoms of lawrencium have ever been made.
 -  No one could really argue with the choice of lawrencium for element 103, after the man who had invented the machine for element synthesis.
 -  Actinides - the radioactive chemical elements that span from actinium to lawrencium on the periodic table - have generated a great deal of interest in recent years.
 -  In 1968, Thiorso and associates at Berkeley used a few atoms of this isotope to study the oxidation behavior of lawrencium.
 
Origin
  
1960s: modern Latin, named after the American physicist E. O. Lawrence (see Lawrence, Ernest Orlando), who founded the laboratory in which it was produced.