View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Lecture.

Lecture

Lecture meaning

A spoken lesson or exposition, usually delivered to a group. | A class that primarily consists of a (weekly or other regularly held) lecture (as in sense 1), usually at college or university. | A berating or scolding, especially if lengthy, formal or given in a stern or angry manner.

Example sentences (20)

The first lecture garnered rave reviews, and by the June lecture Davy wrote to John King that his last lecture had attendance of nearly 500 people.

In response, a group of 66 Notre Dame students, some of whom attended the March 20 Zoom lecture, sent an email to University officials, asking for an apology for the lecture.

Limón comes to the College as part of the newly minted Francis A. McAnaney Humanities Lecture series, which was formally known as the Christian Culture Lecture.

To celebrate Keen, a last lecture event is planned for May 4. A last lecture is a special time to reflect upon the professor’s area related to teaching and research contributions to provide closure.

The lecture is the most recent event in the President’s Distinguished Lecture Series which was started by Steven’s President Nariman Farvadin in 2012.

These events were the subject of this year’s Dolowitz Lecture in Human Rights, which hosted a lecture by historian Seth Anziska on March 21 at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts Marcia and John Price Museum Building at the University of Utah.

Maine Media Workshops and College’s annual summer lecture series begins Monday night, July 9. The Arnold Newman Master Lecture Series, free and open to the public, is held at the Rockport Opera House, 6 Central St. The talks begin at 7:30 p.m.

Mr. Moghalu stated this while delivering a lecture titled “Overcoming Poverty: The Secret of the Wealth of Nations” on Wednesday in Lagos at the 3rd Annual Lecture of the Centre for Financial Journalism (CFJ).

One undergraduate described to me how his politics professor had opened a lecture with a slide reading ‘Brexit is shit’ — apparently ‘to the cheers and adulation of the entire lecture theatre’.

Students flit from lecture to lecture, seen in magnificent droves throughout the hallways at key points in the day.

The professor halted the lecture and said they and the TAs were going to stand by the lecture hall doors and keep watch.

This lecture served as part of the history department’s ongoing Armstrong Lecture series.

Was it a "Spot the obvious mistake" lecture, or a "How not to do it" lecture?

As the lecture-room was well heated and rather close, some of the listeners would from time to time drop to the floor, but this did not disturb the lecture".

At an important lecture during the World Energy Conference he refused to speak on nuclear energy because of his skepticism about it and gave a philosophical lecture instead.

Hegel devoted himself primarily to delivering his lectures; his lecture courses on aesthetics, the philosophy of religion, the philosophy of history, and the history of philosophy were published posthumously from lecture notes taken by his students.

Her lecture was called The Human Body, the Temple of God, a lecture which she had previously presented in the United States.

In 1973, Heisenberg gave a lecture at Harvard University on the historical development of the concepts of quantum theory. citation The substance of this article was presented by Heisenberg in a lecture at Harvard University.

It is said that when Wittgenstein first heard this paradox one evening (which Moore had earlier stated in a lecture), he rushed round to Moore's lodgings, got him out of bed and insisted that Moore repeat the entire lecture to him.

Memoires for Paul de Man, a book-length lecture series presented first at Yale and then at Irvine as Derrida's Wellek Lecture, followed in 1986, with a revision in 1989 that included "Like the Sound of the Sea Deep Within a Shell: Paul de Man's War".