Podium in a sentence as a noun

You ****** me over, Mike said from the podium.

It might happen, but the way they wrote it makes it sound like Tim Cook got on a podium and announced that to the world.

The police then take the coccaine and cash onto a giant podium and ask "This belong to anyone?

If they made missing the point an Olympic sport, you would get lost on your way to the podium to collect the gold medal.

It's basic etiquette to not interrupt someone in that manner if they have the podium.

A pity that the company blew the chance to deliver a kind human response from the podium, but you can't fix history.

I had a history professor who attended Berkeley in the 60s. He recalled the instructional methods used by one of his own professors at Berkeley: He simply got up to the podium, opened a textbook, and started reading.

Nowadays when I think about Perl 6, it is often because I am at a Perl conference and Larry Wall is literally at the podium talking about it and I am like “Well.

Now Americans who employ the latter tactic are starting to fair better on the international scene, even reaching the podium for some long distance events.

It would take too much secret coordination, but the coolest thing would be if all the world's encryption experts/academics colluded to talk at RSA's conference with seemingly-plausible topics, but then have everyone just deliver a speech on RSA's actions before leaving the podium.

Podium definitions

noun

a platform raised above the surrounding level to give prominence to the person on it

See also: dais pulpit rostrum ambo stump soapbox