My father was fond of relating a story about a professor lecturing on geography. |
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At one point, we see the chip's inventor lecturing on the mathematics behind its design. |
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He was lecturing his Economics 303 class about time preferences in March last year. |
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She had taken three doses over 24 hours when she had to stop lecturing her college class because her voice gave out and became a mere whisper. |
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A schoolteacher was routinely lecturing his Grade 3 pupils on the times table, when fire broke out in the building. |
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I just can't do it this weekend as I am lecturing a class on Tuesday and I'm not prepared yet. |
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We do not know how much he made lecturing the rest of us heathens on morality. |
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He also posited a genetic basis for this when he was lecturing at Edinburgh. |
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Clearly, there does not need to be a forest of signs lecturing visitors about what they can and cannot do. |
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It's the voice of the Nanny State at its lecturing, presumptuous, arrogant, illogical and whiny worst. |
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He was nonetheless to spend many years with his American wife in the United States, lecturing and teaching. |
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A good article requires mastery of the subject and research, so does lecturing. |
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This unpretentious poetess does not go about lecturing or delivering sermons in high places. |
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His Scouse accent is resolutely unsoftened by regular contact with vicars and other representatives of the lecturing classes. |
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She returns to Paris, continues lecturing at the university and talks about him in the present tense, as if nothing has happened. |
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Whether he's gently lecturing his daughter on the value of pancakes or putting the smackdown on Raji, Cedric is electric. |
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He now teaches on the course, lecturing on water-based activities, health enhancing physical activities and the philosophy of play and games. |
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She's also adjunct professor at the University of Toronto, lecturing on Caribbean and women's studies. |
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Mr Hackett read history at Oxford University and had planned a career in teaching or lecturing. |
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He watched the poor wretch the commanding officer was lecturing, and looked on him with little pity. |
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Our pharmacology professor lecturing in 1940 stated that 10 drugs in use were probably effective. |
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Up to that point he has held himself aloof, the professor lecturing on abstractions. |
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Then she spins on her heel, and starts lecturing the class about following school rules. |
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The Government is always lecturing farmers about the importance of biosecurity. |
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Without ever resorting to lecturing his audience, he shows how these otherwise invisible folk are in fact the beating heart of the the big city. |
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Before his retiral he accepted fees and funds for attending symposia, lecturing, research, and staff funding from AstraZeneca and GlaxoWellcome. |
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From there I thought I might make more difference lecturing to BEd students at a university. |
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I am so sick of the sanctimony of bigmouths lecturing them about the need for civility in the wake of her murder. |
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In the intervening years, she had a career in academia, lecturing in ancient and modern Greek at both Oxford and Cambridge. |
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Usually by the end my tutor was up and lecturing, with animated gestures accompanying his words. |
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The gardener got quite snippy and started lecturing me about the law and asserting that she had a legal right to cut back the trees in her yard. |
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She was lecturing him about how things worked here since he's still quite new at this. |
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Panda takes time off for sky-diving, bungee jumping and flying when not lecturing in universities and management institutes. |
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Before that she held various lecturing positions in economics and business studies. |
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He spent time in both Warsaw and Krakow and on 26 June obtained his habilitation and began lecturing as a docent. |
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Sometimes I'd even start lecturing the new students present about anatomy, histology, cardiology, immunology. |
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The current storyline in the Zippy the Pinhead newspaper strip has its cartoonist, Bill Griffith, lecturing Zippy on the art of cartooning. |
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The younger woman kept silent, wishing her mother would just give her a straight answer for a change and stop lecturing. |
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And I moved away, got educated up to the hilt, started publishing, lecturing. |
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When we got to his suite he began pacing around the living room, lecturing. |
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Her many varied interests include teaching, reading, fashion design, poetry, lecturing, homemaking, philosophy and painting. |
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Campbell is not only an avid painter, she is also experienced in teaching, lecturing and working with collage and sculpture. |
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He ran swiftly about from object to object, rapidly lecturing their inattention. |
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While lecturing the men of Ireland in public about their mistreatment of women, they apparently had no problem being beastly to each other in the privacy of their home. |
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In comfortable offices in Geneva and New York, one could afford the luxury of lecturing others about justice and the need to combat impunity. |
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It is clear that Margaret has adequate knowledge but it is more use to lecturing than interacting. |
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Members may not engage in any other professional activity, except for lecturing activities or positions held in international organisations. |
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What also helps me here and regularly gives me ideas is my lecturing position at the Technical University in Chemnitz. |
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For nearly two thousand years Biblicists have been lecturing people on the importance of adhering to the Bible's teachings on ethics, manners, and morality. |
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The musical activities of Olga Samaroff encompassed concertizing, teaching piano and music appreciation, writing music criticism, recording music and lecturing. |
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Yes, they engaged in a great deal of the lecturing and scolding recommended by Charles Murray. |
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At the front of the large university classroom, a teacher was still lecturing the class, completely unaware that two of the many students were no longer paying attention. |
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The teacher gave no reply, and simply went back to lecturing the class. |
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I found him intractable, dominating and intent on lecturing everyone about the way to do things, which in his case meant only the way they'd done things in the fifties. |
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It also explores the self-indulgence of the literary society and the day-to-day shallowness of middle-class life, without ever lecturing its audience. |
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Doug Peacock has been writing and lecturing about Yellowstone's bears for 40 years. |
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She absorbed herself in the private study of medical books, and in 1838 began lecturing on women's anatomy at the Ladies' Physiological Society of Boston. |
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It badly mishandled the battle over its bail-out extension, lecturing its euro-zone partners when it ought to have sought accommodation. |
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I have a hard time believing that he was calmly lecturing others on his lifestyle choice, and it was probably causing the distractions that the school claimed. |
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In the first two years I was very much lecturing and preaching to them, I now realize I was insufferable. |
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His volunteer work includes lecturing at the Ontario Police College, the local police force, local service clubs and high schools. |
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The slightly more secular UUP avoided lecturing individuals on issues affecting the bedroom. |
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Mr Cameron's manners are too good to accuse him of lecturing the Russians, let alone nagging them. |
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Mr. Speaker, of all the political parties in this House put together, the Liberals are not the ones to be lecturing us about favouritism. |
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They are lecturing us, telling us what to do to correct the injustices of the system. |
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He also participated in the Canadian delegation to Sri Lanka in 2001 lecturing on Canadian approaches to alternative dispute resolution. |
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Many critics have pointed out inconsistencies such as professors lecturing about the virtues of active learning and student-centred pedagogy. |
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Akram is a working alim, lecturing in mosques and universities and dispensing fatwas on issues like inheritance and divorce. |
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In 1812, Davy was knighted and gave up his lecturing position at the Royal Institution. |
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Having thus become a Privatdozent, Weber joined the University of Berlin's faculty, lecturing and consulting for the government. |
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His duties included lecturing, and negotiating the purchase of the navy's first Whitehead torpedo. |
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So let us stop lecturing the rest of the world on democracy. |
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He is just a one-joke act spouting corporate career advice and lecturing us on the amorality of capitalism. |
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Based on this past experience and the remarks of the member, one can seriously question the appropriateness of his lecturing our government on how to maintain cordial relations with the McGuinty government in Ontario. |
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The remoteness, the coolness, the lecturing style is now a liability. |
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Such reflection should not be limited to lecturing and censuring Ireland. |
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Per Mertesacker is lecturing and he is eminently qualified to do so. |
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This programme allows foreign professors and research scholars to engage in research, teaching and lecturing with their American colleagues for up to three years. |
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Some of the accusations voiced have been hypocritical and demagogic, especially those made by governments that, before lecturing others, should put their own houses in order. |
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In addition to lecturing at a number of Canadian universities, Larry Chartrand has played an active role in contributing to the rights of Aboriginal people. |
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Several of our lawyers are university professors lecturing in the domain of their specialization and quite a few have published books and articles which have become works of reference within the profession. |
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Sweeping away the dictatorship of capital in Venezuela means sweeping away the bourgeois regime through proletarian revolution, not lecturing the capitalist strongman as though he were a wayward apprentice. |
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This is probably not too surprising as Fay is also an academic, lecturing in ethnomusicology at the University of Sheffield. |
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The greatest pitfall for ombudsmen or mediators is to start lecturing. |
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Coming in here and lecturing me on how I should do my job? |
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Since the 1990s, Hawking has accepted the mantle of role model for disabled people, lecturing and participating in fundraising activities. |
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In January 1920, it was announced that Russell had accepted the reinstatement offer from Trinity and would begin lecturing from October. |
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He seemed to make a good recovery, and he felt up to accepting an invitation to the US, lecturing and conducting at the University of Michigan. |
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His lecturing was nevertheless considered poor, as he often mumbled and walked into an adjacent room to find something while continuing to talk. |
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Even while he was lecturing in economics at Coventry Technical College he still found time to play the odd fool or baddy. |
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In his role as a college professor of archaeology, Jones is scholarly and learned in a tweed suit, lecturing on ancient civilizations. |
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Over more than 25 years of writing, teaching, and lecturing, I have found little support for such claims at the level of generality of the Universal Declaration. |
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She happened to be visiting Dublin in 1884, when Wilde was lecturing at the Gaiety Theatre. |
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He could organise and share his views on art, literature and life, yet in a format less tedious than lecturing. |
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The mounting pressure to develop creative, innovative and critical skills implies that traditional teaching approaches based on direct instruction or lecturing are no longer adequate. |
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Whether lecturing or conversing privately, Wittgenstein always spoke emphatically and with a distinctive intonation. |
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After a lifetime of puffing on his Havanos, Castro is largely as fit as a fiddle and still writing and lecturing on his personal experiment with Marxist Leninism. |
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Wilde was left to return to England and lecturing on topics including Personal Impressions of America, The Value of Art in Modern Life, and Dress. |
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Margaret Thatcher tried to do it again, digging in her heels, lecturing archly on her achievements, illuminating our European partners on the superior virtue of her ways. |
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