27 adverbs to describe how to lecturing

Flockley made some bad errors during the first game played, and was lectured so severely that he left the team in disgust, and Songbird Powell was put in his place.

I have not forgotten," he went on, striking the hilt of his sword angrily, "the insults which were put upon Queen Mary when she was preached to and lectured publicly by the sour fanatic Knox, and was treated, forsooth, as if she had been some trader's daughter who had ventured to laugh on a Sunday.

The children had been duly lectured for their breach of discipline and then, that evening, consigned to their room for their imprisonment which was to last until the next evening.

"His gravely lecturing his friend about it."Ib., i, 478.

Graduated at Harvard College 1821, working his way; taught school; began to study for the ministry 1823; licensed to preach 1826; trip to the South for his health 1827-8; Unitarian minister in Boston 1829-32; European travel 1832-3; settled at Concord 1834; lectured extensively for over thirty years.

That women have, for years, distinguished themselves in connection with medical science, may be seen from the following interesting historical facts presented by Caroline H. Ball: Madame Francoise, the midwife of Catharine de Medici, lectured ably to students of both sexes.

More practical, may we not say, than this imitation of the Florentine arti of the Middle Ages was the Working Men's College, founded in London in the fifties by that other earnest Christian Socialist, F.D. Maurice, in which Ruskin lectured gratuitously, took charge of the drawing classes, and hied off to the country with its members to sketch from nature and otherwise instruct and entertain them.

When Leigh Hunt had his first interview with Wordsworth, the latter lectured to himfinely, indeedupon his own writings; and repeated the entire sonnet, "Great men have been among us," which Hunt said he did "in a grand and earnest tone."

After his shot he lectured instructively upon its faults.

DICEY, Professor Albert Venn, Lectures introductory to the Study of the Law of the Constitution, London, 1885.

Your lectures to crowded and promiscuous audiences on a subject manifestly, in many of its aspects, political, interwoven with the framework of the government, are practical and powerful assertions of the right and the duty of woman to labor side by side with her brother for the welfare and redemption of the world.

"Where are the crawfish?" Mathieu meantime was lecturing Frederic.

Fräulein Müller lectured her mildly from time to time; but that stout German was too lazy to put any force or fire into her lectures.

Mr Baildon, for example, is perpetually lecturing Stevenson for his 'pessimism'; surely a strange charge against the man who has done more than any modern artist to make men ashamed of their shame of life.

Practically the lecture, on most days, occupied two hours.

I will give the College of Surgeons precisely the same lectures, down to the smallest details:nay, I will tell the old fellows how to make a poultice."

In January, 1875, I made up my mind to lecture regularly, and in the National Reformer for January 17th I find the announcement that "Mrs. Annie Besant (Ajax) will lecture at South Place Chapel, Finsbury, on 'Civil and religious liberty'", Mr. Conway took the chair at this first identification of "Ajax" with myself, and sent a very kindly notice of the lecture to the Cincinnati Commercial.

Author's Introduction This book is a result of three lectures, which were delivered in the Hall of Gray's Inn, London, on June 13, 15, and 19, 1922, respectively, under the auspices and on the invitation of the University of London.

Then those who had hitherto sneered at woman's incapacity for intellectual attainments, or lectured her roundly for frivolity, heartlessness, and deception, sneered all the more at her presumption in fancying her heart, or head either, required any other cultivation than man, in his wisdom, saw fitting.

An intense hatred of shams and injustice lurks in every song; but the hatred is saved from bitterness by the humor with which captives, especially rich churchmen, are solemnly lectured by the bandits, while they squirm at sight of devilish tortures prepared before their eyes in order to make them give up their golden purses; and the scene generally ends in a bit of wild horse-play.

They continued to lecture almost uninterruptedly for five months, and though the prejudice against them as women appeared but slightly diminished, people were becoming familiarized to the idea of women speaking in public, and the way was gradually being cleared for the advance-guard of that noble army which has brought about so many changes favorable to the weak and downtrodden of its own sex.

And he has since lectured widely against the I.W.W. Did he carry a rope in the parade because he owned a cow and a calf?

This gentleman lectured acceptably on this topic during the winter at Detroit.

I had devoted much interest to it for yearsunderstood it, perhaps, better than any one in the territory, and could lecture upon it con amore.

There was one season when I was lecturing, commonly, five evenings in the week, through most of the lecturing period.

27 adverbs to describe how to  lecturing  - Adverbs for  lecturing