Treatise in a sentence as a noun

"A brief treatise in radioactive decay, or how I learned to stop worrying and love the particle.

I don't have time to read your 20-page manual/treatise on a utility that doesn't explain how to actually use the thing until page 17.

I was 76% expecting a treatise on how various time and date fields and functions have evolved over PostgreSQL versions.

Here's a few of the factual errors:>Theyll launch into a treatise about how the Three Primary ColorsThey'll try to teach you Subtractive colour theory.

But what kind of person states up front that this is basically the first time he has ever given a talk - and then writes a several thousand word treatise on how to give talks?

This is the risk of the dirty sushi restaurant with poor service that inevitably fails, but then writes a broad treatise about how the area won't support sushi restaurants.

I don't believe that anyone would have expected to read a treatise on the codependent relationship between the various authorities in the Middle East when reading that title.

He wrote a treatise in the Arabic language during the 9th century, which was translated into Latin in the 12th century under the title Algoritmi de numero Indorum.

If you strip out some personal bitterness and spent some serious time with a scorched earth editor, this could be a very effective treatise on the state of ethics and corporate responsibility in the technology industry.

> Error establishing a database connectionDiabolic, stateful database connections blocking a Haskell treatise!

Anyway, your comment immediately reminded me of this anecdote I had saved in my quotes file that I thought was apt:'One day when I was a junior medical student, a very important Boston surgeon visited the school and delivered a great treatise on a large number of patients who had undergone successful operations for vascular reconstruction.

Treatise definitions

noun

a formal exposition