Lecture I People Gave Series Room/Hall Talk Professor
Word
lecture
WordType
(noun)
Phonetic
BrE / ˈlektʃə(r) / NAmE / ˈlektʃər /
Example
to deliver/give a lecture to first-year students
to attend a series of lectures on jane austen
a lecture room/hall
several people made speeches at the wedding.
Sound
Native audio playback is not supported.
Image
Search images by the word https://www.google.com/search?biw=1280&bih=661&tbm=isch&sa=1&q=lecture
Content
lecture
(noun)BrE / ˈlektʃə(r) / NAmE / ˈlektʃər /
a talk that is given to a group of people to teach them about a particular subject, often as part of a university or college course
to deliver/give a lecture to first-year students
to attend a series of lectures on Jane Austen
a lecture room/hall
Several people made speeches at the wedding.
a lecture on the Roman army
a course/series of lectures
a televised presidential address
She gave an interesting talk on her visit to China.
to preach a sermon
a long angry talk that somebody gives to one person or a group of people because they have done something wrong
I know I should stop smoking—don't give me a lecture about it.
Extra Examples
I don’t need any lectures from you on responsibility.
I don’t take lectures from anyone on how to behave.
I got a lecture from Dad about coming home on time.
I have a lecture at nine tomorrow.
Professor Pearson gave the inaugural lecture in the new lecture theatre.
She gave me a stern lecture on ingratitude.
She referred to Professor Jones’s work in her lecture on Shakespeare’s imagery.
She wasn’t at the lecture.
The fire alarm went during his lecture.
The society is putting on a series of lectures on the subject next term.
a familiar figure on the international lecture circuit
a lecture by Professor Snow
a lecture entitled ‘How to Prevent Food Poisoning’
a lecture to the Darwin Society
He gave a very interesting and informative lecture on the Roman army.
I know I should stop smoking—don’t give me a lecture about it.
a lecture room/hall
a lecture theatre
Word Origin
late Middle English (in the sense ‘reading, a text to read’): from Old French, or from medieval Latin lectura, from Latin lect- ‘read, chosen’, from the verb legere.
Copyright
This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
Tags:
l
Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.