| GEDDES | Patrick -, biologist and town planner credited with coining the word conurbation (6) |
| GERTRUDE | American writer credited with coining the term "Lost Generation" (8,5) |
| STEIN | American writer credited with coining the term "Lost Generation" (8,5) |
| FREDHOYLE | British astronomer credited with coining the phrase "big bang" |
| AESOP | Fabulist credited with coining the term "lion's share" |
| ALFRED | American biologist and zoologist who founded the Institute for Sex Research at Indiana University in 1947 (6,6) (see 20A) |
| KINSEY | American biologist and zoologist who founded the Institute for Sex Research at Indiana University in 1947 (See 55A) |
| CARSON | *Marine biologist and "Silent Spring" author |
| SHAKESPEARE | Actor, playwright and sonneteer credited with coining or introducing some 1,700 words into the English language, including gossip, ladybird, leapfrog, moonbeam, nuncle, puppy-dog, quarrelsome and zany |
| PLINYTHEELDER | Early encyclopedist credited with coining "Home is where the heart is" |
| BRENTMUSBURGER | Sports commentator who was one the members of The NFL Today and is known for coining the phrase March Madness: 2 wds. |
| LECORBUSIER | Swiss-French architect and town planner born Charles Edouard Jeanneret in 1887 (2,9) |
| NASH | Architect and town planner set up two hospitals |
| FUNK | Polish-born US biochemist (1884-1967) known for studying - and coining the term - vitamins (4) |
| CASIMIR | Polish-born US biochemist (1884-1967) known for studying - and coining the term - vitamins (7) |
| ABERCROMBIE | Sir Patrick ___, English town planner who created the County of London Plan in 1943 and the Greater London Plan in 1944 |
| DAWKINS | Richard -; biologist and author of science books including The Magic of Reality and The Selfish Gene (7) |
| SWAMMERDAM | Dutch naturalist, biologist and microscopist noted for his study on bees and for being the first per |
| LASCELLESABERCROMBIE | Poet known as the Georgian Laureate, father of a 20th-century town planner |
| GOULD | Stephen Jay, U.S. paleontologist, evolutionary biologist and science writer (5) |