All America has got to do is to try to be an optician and look on the bright side of things, and she's bound to win out in the end.
If they that look out at the windows be darkened, the optician is happy to supply them with eye-glasses for use before the public, and spectacles for their hours of privacy.
He at once decided to have a better instrument, and he wrote to a celebrated opticianin London with the view of making a purchase.
But the price which the optician demanded seemed more than Herschel thought he could or ought to give.
That the spectra of the moon and planets are practically nothing but faint reproductions of the spectrum of the sun was discovered by the great German optician Fraunhofer about the year 1816.
Partly (I think) through Drinkwater, I communicated with an optician named Bancks, in the Strand, who constructed the optical part.
And now both the local optician and Edwin were overthrown by a boy's sobbing tears.
And he, Edwin, was guilty of the spectacles because he had forced Hilda, by his calm bantering commonsense, to consult a small local optician of good reputation.
The best local optician was good enough for the great majority of the inhabitants of the Five Towns and would be good enough for George.
The local optician said that every year he dealt with dozens of cases similar to George's.
That afternoon I followed several; of these I selected three; one was an opticianand electrician, an old-established firm, doing a large business.
Go to the wisest and best optician you know of and state your wants and your case plainly, and be assured you will be properly fitted.
It is not too much to say that if an optician wanted to sell me an instrument which had all these defects, I should think myself quite justified in blaming his carelessness in the strongest terms, and giving him back his instrument.
Thus was the pooroptician left to his fate; and it is probable that, but for the fortunate return of Newton, it would soon have been miserably decided.
It is almost unfair to the arts of the glass-blower or optician to describe them side by side with the humble trade of soldering.
When the supper was over and the healths of the bride and groom had been drank, "The Story of the Missing Bridge" was proposed, and the optician rose to respond.
While she walked slowly around the room the optician sat down at the table and wrote rapidly.
The opticianhimself was quite in keeping with the house.
She felt in love and charity with all men, and, finding the optician at leisure, she entered into conversation with him in her most gracious manner.
The house occupied by Mr. Clark the optician was old-fashioned and roomy; built in the days when ground was cheap and space need not be economized.
The first process to be performed by theoptician is to grind the glass into the shape of a lens with perfectly spherical surfaces.
The tool of the optician is a very simple affair, being nothing more than a plate of iron somewhat larger, perhaps a fourth, than the lens to be ground to the corresponding curvature.
The very best optician will always find that on a first trial his glass is not perfect.
The test applied by the opticianis much more exact, and also more easy.
No doubt this optician was a Scotchman, who had given preference to a national celebrity.
The man to whom chief credit is due for directing those final steps that made the compound microscope a practical implement instead of a scientific toy was the English amateur optician Joseph Jackson Lister.
He told Master Hans about this, and the optician fixed two lenses in a tube, and looking at the weathercock on a neighboring steeple saw that it seemed much nearer and to be upside down.
School tests will not have been used to their utmost possibilities until optician and physician alike take the ethical position that the first consideration is the patient's welfare, not their own profits.
If there is no expert optician near, apply for cards to your health board or school board; failing there, write to your state health and school boards.
It must be made unethical and unprofessional for physician and optician alike to prescribe in the dark.
Upon an editorial in a daily paper on the relation of eyeglasses to headache and indigestion, an optician based a promise of immediate relief for these ailments if he himself were patronized.
The education of physician, oculist, and optician can be expedited by eye tests in school and by the follow-up work of schools in removing the prejudice of parents against glasses when needed.
Laymen and physicians must be taught that it is just as unethical and unprofessional for oculists and physicians to fail to bring their knowledge within the practical reach of the masses as for the optician to advertise his wares.
Physicians feel very strongly that it is as unethical for an optician to fit eyeglasses without a physician's prescription as for a pharmacist to give drugs without a physician's prescription.
It must soon be recognized as unethical and unprofessional for an optician who is also a skilled physician to refer patients to a medical practitioner ignorant as to optical science.
A physician uninformed as to eye troubles is just as unsafe as an optician determined to sell glasses.
The justification for this feeling should be based not upon the commercial motive of the optician but upon his ignorance.
There are indications that she has had recourse to anoptician at least twice during the last few months.
Of course, we always have the optician clue to fall back upon, but I take a short cut when I can get it.
The Optician and the Oculist have studied the matter so carefully and know the eye so thoroly in its various stages of development that they know exactly the size of type that children of various ages should use.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "optician" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.