Lectern in a sentence as a noun

Sorry, there was some sort of technical issue with the lectern mike.

I was once at a conference in which a similar debate was ongoing at the lectern.

The on-stage demos of the iPad aren’t conducted at a table or a lectern.

They broadcast an empty lectern whenever he took longer than expected in the restroom.

Each classroom had a lectern with PC and monitor built in which offered access to control the various room facilities.

"Mayer stepped down, and others took the lectern to recite their prepared remarks, which failed to acknowledge that the threat had effectively just been neutralized.

Long after everything was computerized here, they still had this enormous ledger resting on a kind of lectern behind the counter.

Thank you for your efforts!While I understand the problem of tracking, it has to be said that people who move around the stage usually have a more more engaging stage presence. In contrast, people who stand rigidly at the lectern are often boring.

I'm not sure if it's true that lecturing started because books were so expensive that one person read out the one chained to the lectern and everyone made their own copies, but it feels about right.

In the latter part of high school, I began standing in the classes where I both knew the teacher fairly well and didn't think I would bother anyone else by doing so. Since there weren't any standing desks, I would either stand myself near a wall or an unused desk I could lean on and carry a clipboard, or I would occasionally grab a music stand or an unused lectern.

Manual labor and craftsmanship were not really popular with higher society in that day and age. I've mentioned this before here, but it's a fun anecdote: Galileo taught at the University of Padova, and to honor him, his students built him a lectern themselves, rather than pay to have it built, which they could have easily afforded.

Favorite quote from the articles so far about BPF:Gregg started with a demonstration tool that he had just written: it's immediate manifestation was in the creation of a high-pitched tone that varied in frequency as he walked around the lectern.

"Throughout my academic ascent in America from lean lecturer to Full Professor, I have never delivered to my audience one scrap of information not prepared in typescript beforehand and not held under my eyes on the bright-lit lectern.

Your audience will come away with a feeling of closeness and emotional rapport because you were "listening" to them during the speech via your proxies.+ Don't give a speech seated or standing behind a podium/lectern: weak speakers have a tendency to hide, and the body language tends to come across as fidgeting even when it isn't.

Lectern definitions

noun

desk or stand with a slanted top used to hold a text at the proper height for a lecturer