Which preposition to use with lecturers
Coleridge is come home, and is going to turn lecturer on taste at the Royal Institution.
AND Henrietta Brown Smith Lecturer In Education, University Of London, Goldsmiths' College Editor Of "Education By Life" "Is it not marvellous that an infant should be the heir of the whole world, and see those mysteries which the books of the learned never unfold?
There was yet no established lecturer of Greek; the university, therefore, appointed Ascham to read in the open schools, and paid him out of the publick purse an honorary stipend, such as was then reckoned sufficiently liberal.
By W.G. SLEIGHT, M.A., D.Lit, Lecturer at Greystoke Place Training College, London.
The Donnellan Lecturer for 1897-8 took for his subject the doctrine of the Blessed Trinity in relation to contemporary idealistic philosophy.
Don't the lecturers to young medical students say, "Divert your patient's mind to some topic other than himself as you get your first impression"?
Translated from a stenographic report not edited by the lecturer by Henry B. Monges.
They sent lecturers into every town, preaching the same doctrine, and proving by scientific facts the justice of the cause they advocated.
Kathleen Eppes Saumarez, a lecturer before women's clubs, Margaret's almoner in furthering the cause of theosophy, nature study, and rational dress.
I have often wished that Lecturers on Botany, instead of confining their instructions to the mere physiology, or anatomy, or classification or nomenclature of their favorite science, would go more into the poetry of it, and teach young people to appreciate the moral influences of the floral tribesto draw honey for the human heart from the sweet breasts of flowersto sip from their radiant chalices a delicious medicine for the soul.
The women did not invite lecturers from Columbia University to address them.
As a political partisan, he is rather the lecturer than the advocate.
He did not, however, work as one of the regular staff of lecturers until the next year.
Sarah Douglass, who was a successful medical lecturer among the colored women of Philadelphia and New York, encouraged her friend in this idea, and urged her to take a course of lectures.