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TIRADES |
Lectures |
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SERMONS |
Priest’s lectures |
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LYCEUM |
Hall for lectures and concerts |
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TALKS |
Lectures held up in Minsk later |
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LECTURE |
To deliver a lecture or lectures. |
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LECTURER |
One who lectures; an assistant preacher. |
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REPRIMANDS |
I hear salesman returns to custody lectures |
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READER |
One who reads lectures on scientific subjects. |
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BELECTURE |
To vex with lectures; to lecture frequently. |
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PRELECTOR |
A reader of lectures or discourses; a lecturer. |
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EXOTERICS |
The public lectures or published writings of
Aristotle. See Esoterics. |
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SENTENTIARY |
One who read lectures, or commented, on the Sentences
of Peter Lombard, Bishop of Paris (1159-1160), a school divine. |
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TEXT-BOOK |
A volume, as of some classical author, on which a
teacher lectures or comments; hence, any manual of instruction; a
schoolbook. |
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THEATRE |
Any room adapted to the exhibition of any performances
before an assembly, as public lectures, scholastic exercises,
anatomical demonstrations, surgical operations, etc. |
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COURSE |
A series of motions or acts arranged in order; a succession
of acts or practices connectedly followed; as, a course of medicine; a
course of lectures on chemistry. |
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FUND |
...cific
object; as, the fund of an ecclesiastical society; a fund for the
maintenance of lectures or poor students; also, money systematically
... |
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PROFESSOR |
...ce or
branch of learning; especially, an officer in a university, college, or
other seminary, whose business it is to read lectures, or instruct... |