lecture
Anyone can lecture from the butt, only very few can act.
— Pawan Mishra
Fiction can show you a different world. It can take you somewhere you've never been. Once you've visited other worlds, like those who ate fairy fruit, you can never be entirely content with the world that you grew up in. Discontent is a good thing: discontented people can modify and improve their worlds, leave them better, leave them different.
— Neil Gaiman
He utilizes form for a striking lecture;young poets shiver inexperience, but thaw over their own work, fertilize magic.
— Kristen Henderson
I have noticed over the past three years that most African Christians depend on their pastor or preachers for directions in life than their lecturers, politicians and nurses. That tells why most people refuse certain medical priorities in regard to their pastor's messages. I think if every pastor should have entrepreneurial knowledge coupled with spiritual integrity, Africa will shake!
— Israelmore Ayivor
I have seen many phases of life; I have moved in imperial circles, I have been a Minister of State; but if I had to live my life again, I would always remain in my laboratory, for the greatest joy of my life has been to accomplish original scientific work, and, next to that, to lecture to a set of intelligent students.
— Jean-Baptiste Dumas
Interestingly enough, whenever I cite examples from superhero comic books in a lecture, my students never wonder when they will use this information in their "real life". Apparently they all have plans, post-graduation, that involve protecting the City from all threat while wearing spandex. As a law-abiding citizen, this notion fills me with a great sense of security, knowing as I do how many of my scientist colleagues could charitably be termed "mad".
— James Kakalios
JE sews content Que TU ais troupe ton live, Steve. Tout Le Monde y arrive, un four of l'outré. IL fact Paris en lire Dix, cent of mile, main on finite tours par LE decipher. Elfin, pressure tours. Certain abandonment savant de l'avoid troupe, malheureusement...
— François Gravel
Martin Luther called the church building the “Sundays” (lit. “mouth house” or "speech house”) because he believed that the Graeco-Roman “pagan lecture” of the sophist entertainers who took over the Catholic Church should be the focus of “the service”. Sermons might have been helpful in the later Middle Ages when even many Catholic priests couldn't read. However, modern research has repeatedly proven that lecturing is the worst possible way to educate others because it’s so boring. Might traditional, so-called-inspired preaching still be the best way to communicate God’s Word?” ~ © gap '42™
— Gary Patton
No matter how you were taught by your teacher about how to recite a poem, it is impossible to wear your teacher's smiling face to the stage. You got to put on that smile.
— Israelmore Ayivor
Some people talk in their sleep. Lecturers talk while other people sleep
— Albert Camus
© Spoligo | 2025 All rights reserved