43 adjectives to describe lecturer

And the Anti-Slavery lecturer, whether white or colored, has always been among the welcomed guests of her home.

But all such feelings are poor and weak when compared with the sinking of the heart, and the trembling of the knees, which, seize upon the unhappy lecturer as he advances towards his first audience, and as before his eyes rises a ghastly vision of a tongue-tied would-be speaker facing rows of listening faces, listening tosilence.

He was doubtless the most brilliant and successful lecturer that the Middle Ages ever saw.

Suddenly he removed my hat and put his broad, hard palm upon my organs with an impudent dexterity which made me doubt whether he had not been a pickpocket or a phrenological lecturer.

The New England Yearly Meeting went so far as to advise the closing of meeting-house doors to all anti-slavery lecturers and the disownment the sisters had long expected now became imminent.

The introductory remark of a celebrated lecturer is characteristic.

To his qualifications as secretary, he adds those of an able and successful lecturer.

It is a singular fact, that Mr. Emerson is the most steadily attractive lecturer in America.

As he stood before me, he was never at rest for an instant, but changed his support from one leg to the other,they were slight as a young boy's,and fumbled, as it were, with his feet; as I have seen a distinguished medical lecturer, of Boston, gesticulate with his toes.

In this country, we have known grave professors to refuse to address lyceums which thought fit to employ an occasional female lecturer.

This singular performance is the work of Oliver B. Peirce, an itinerant lecturer on grammar, who dates his preface at "Rome, N. Y., December 29th, 1838."

Elected a student of his college, he became a mathematical lecturer in 1855, continuing in that occupation until 1881.

In this country, we have known grave professors to refuse to address lyceums which thought fit to employ an occasional female lecturer.

She became a professional lecturer, activist, suffragette, poet, essayist, novelist, and the author of the first published short story written by an African-American.

I think, that, if any experienced lecturer gives you a different account from this, it will probably be one of those eloquent or forcible speakers who hold an audience by the charm of their manner, whatever they talk about,even when they don't talk very well.

They had hold of one another already, and now began to pull up and down the aisles in a way that reminded me of the old-fashioned mesmeric lecturers, when they told their subjects that they were this or that, and set them to acting the part.

[Footnote 63: An astronomer, and a favorite lecturer on the science; a native of Kentucky.

TODHUNTER, ISAAC, mathematician, born at Rye; educated at University College, London, and at Cambridge, where he graduated senior wrangler and Smith's prizeman in 1848; elected Fellow and principal mathematical lecturer of his college (St. John's), and soon became widely known in educational circles by his various and excellent handbooks and treatises on mathematical subjects (1820-1884).

" This is not the idyllic pair sung by Gessner, but the duly and comfortably appointed university beadles, whose duty it is to keep watch and ward so that no students fight duels in Bovden, and, above all, that no new ideas (such as are generally obliged to remain in quarantine for several decades outside of Göttingen) are smuggled in by speculative private lecturers.

Unluckily, too, Jenny observed one evening at the five o'clock tea, "I hear that Mrs. Duncombe has picked up some very funny peoplea lady lecturer, who is coming to set us all to rights.

In the recent, or what I am inclined to call the grand lecturer's symbolism of Masonry (a sort of symbolism for which I have very little veneration), Hiram of Tyre is styled the symbol of strength, as Hiram Abif is of beauty.

During the Great War he served seventeen months in army camps as an entertainer and inspirational lecturer, traveling fifty thousand miles and addressing a quarter of a million men.

Another scolded the working-classes in the style of an intoxicated temperance lecturer.

GRESHAM COLLEGE, college founded by Sir Thomas Gresham in 1575, and managed by the Mercer's Company, London, where lectures are delivered, twelve each year, by successive lecturers on physics, rhetoric, astronomy, law, geometry, music, and divinity, to form part of the teaching of University College.

For the people at large the press was represented almost entirely by the licenced preacher, and, in the larger towns, the licenced lecturer.

43 adjectives to describe  lecturer