For the uninitiated, a reading is more than someone standing at a lectern, reading aloud to a bunch of book geeks. |
|
Martin stood on the dais where the lectern usually sat, a low brazier to either side. |
|
Later the padre and I wheeled the brass eagle lectern from the church to St Oswald's Church, Fulford, where it is still used. |
|
Well look, discipline is certainly part of the process, and perhaps that's a cue for me to take a move from the news desk over to the lectern. |
|
The elaborate lectern, the pulpit, the low screen separating chancel and nave, and the uniform seating remain. |
|
So Jake pulled a piece of paper from his pocket, placed it in front of him on the lectern, straightened his tie and coughed nervously. |
|
From the lectern the lecturer can operate the hall lights and the slide projector, as well as opening or closing the louvered ceiling skylights. |
|
Slowly, slowly I began to approach the Wall in fear and trembling like a pious cantor going to the lectern to lead the prayers. |
|
The seated figures are compact in scale, their chairs and lectern angled and their attributes foreshortened. |
|
The lectern end of the hall is tucked under a volume that thrusts into the two-story space. |
|
They were superseded later in the Middle Ages, being replaced by a single movable lectern. |
|
The taperers stand on either side of the lectern, providing light for reading. |
|
Move this attractive, affordable lectern from room to room and keep your notes in order and your audiences wowed. |
|
One of the most important aspects of a room intended for AV based presentation or instruction is the lectern or presentation millwork. |
|
The sound reflected from the lectern arrives toward the rear of the mic, where sound is rejected. |
|
It won't automatically dim the lights for you, but you can control that from the lectern, too. |
|
He was almost all the way through his speech when his words suddenly slurred, he coughed and he appeared to lean on the lectern for support. |
|
They will appear on stage behind a lectern and be able to see and interact with the audience as if they are actually there. |
|
At the left is an elegant red chair with cloth fringe and brass rivets and a tiny lectern. |
|
The lectern developed in the 13th century into its most distinctive form with the bookrest modelled as an eagle with outstretched wings. |
|
|
Casting the lectern aside, he stood at the front of the stage, oozing boyish charm and melting more than a few hearts in the audience. |
|
Working in a standing position At the touch of a button, the work assistant support frame can be extended to the height of a lectern. |
|
In Bronxville, Mr. Deskovic rested his hands on a plant stand in lieu of a lectern. |
|
The conference service includes use of a screen, an overhead projector, a slide projector, a flipchart and a lectern. |
|
The keyboard and mouse tray as well as the lectern surface and any attached microphones are adjustable to fit each speaker with just the touch of a switch. |
|
The format of the session was speeches by each of the three writers, and Alexis Wright took to the lectern next, her speech soft and halting. |
|
Let the Liberal leader muse from his professor's lectern during the spenders' conference. |
|
Below this is a green slate altar that can be substituted by a lectern insert to accommodate speeches. |
|
In such cases the deputy who is the author of the first of these questions is the one to read it out from the lectern. |
|
The painter placed Princess Mary before her gothic lectern, reading an illuminated book of hours. |
|
The cynical middle-age academic would rather spend time drinking scotch at the local pub than teach at the lectern. |
|
To facilitate the observance of the time limit, a light system may be installed on the lectern to signal the approach of the three-minute limit. |
|
In another photo pair, a crowd listens to a speaker at a lectern in a light-filled conference hall. |
|
When the court came to order, he approached a lectern and stood at attention. |
|
Vicki Jackson, a Harvard Law professor, rises to the lectern and begins her remarks. |
|
Tebow is gamely playing along with his celebrity here, helping reporters place their tape recorders at his lectern and kiddingly scribbling in a reporter's notebook for him. |
|
If there is a guest speaker, there should be room for the guest speaker to sit in the stage area and have easy access to the judge's or presiding officer's lectern. |
|
The British Home Secretary stood at the lectern in this House and called for a more lenient approach to the ban on torture when terrorists are involved. |
|
The teaching pack is housed in a large cardboard folder and comes in the form of a sturdy portable lectern, which serves as both educators guide and learners material. |
|
If you are speaking from the rostrum or a lectern and want to reply to questions from the floor, please make sure you have a receiver set with you to follow the questions as they are interpreted. |
|
|
The statue and lectern where it stood were designed by old Rugbeian Charles Nicholson. |
|
The pulpit and lectern are also usually found at the extension of the bema. |
|
John's Church Jhelum was built and the names of those 35 British soldiers are carved on a marble lectern present in that church. |
|
If you plan to move away from the lectern, you will need a clip-on or lavaliere microphone with 25 feet of cord. |
|
One of those speaking from said lectern this morning is the always... entertaining... Rep. Louis Gohmert of Texas, who's not known for filtering out his worst ideas so much as he is for screaming them at full volume. |
|
At an emergency briefing on Thursday 5 February, fire meteorologist Claire Yeo found the news she had to deliver so grave that she froze in silence at her lectern. |
|
AmpliVox's premium sound system can be added to all but one of the Da-Lite lectern lines. |
|
Delle Chatman is depicted at the lectern of her parish church wearing one of her cancer chapeaus and a stole. |
|
Use the leveler in situations where it is desirable to maintain a constant volume level, such as for podium and lectern microphones where the speaker's proximity to the microphone varies. |
|
The word chair can refer to the place from which the holder of the office presides, whether on a chair, at a lectern, or elsewhere. |
|
One month later he was examining inventions applications for patentability at his famous lectern in room 86, on the third floor of the building on the corner of the Speichergasse and the Genfergasse. |
|
Designed to mount securely into a wall, lectern, or other flat surface, the TLP 350MV provides the power of touchpanel control in the same three-gang form factor common for keypad controllers. |
|
Young students, men and women, reading in German, English, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Italian from the lectern next to the altar, presented to God the intentions for the prayer of the faithful. |
|
The basic idea behind the Ceiling Visualizer is to keep the speaker's table or lectern free, so that nothing disturbs the view between the speaker and audience. |
|
He was not projecting outward to a crowd like a professor at a lectern. |
|
Behind the tangled garden of microphones that had sprouted on the lectern, Goldwater spoke softly and casually about his family. |
|
Chief Justice Rehnquist was famous for cutting off lawyers in midsentence, even midsyllable, as soon as the red light on the lectern came on to signal that time was up. |
|