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Example sentences for "last lecture"

  • Similarly, those of you who in your long vacations have ever stayed near Dumblane will be, I think, disappointed in no small degree by this study of the abbey, for which I showed you the sketch at last Lecture.

  • Remember those passages from Emerson which I read at my last lecture.

  • In my last lecture I shall have to try to persuade you that this is the case.

  • I find another good description of the divided will in the autobiography of Henry Alline, the Nova Scotian evangelist, of whose melancholy I read a brief account in my last lecture.

  • In my last lecture I quoted to you the ultra-radical opinion of Mr. Havelock Ellis, that laughter of any sort may be considered a religious exercise, for it bears witness to the soul's emancipation.

  • I laid before you, in my last lecture, first lines of the chart of Italian history in the thirteenth century, which I hope gradually to fill with colour, and enrich, to such degree as may be sufficient for all comfortable use.

  • I closed my last lecture at the question respecting Nicholas's masonry.

  • In my last lecture we discussed the revival of the old religious forms by Augustus, and the consummation of this work of his in the splendid ritual of the Ludi saeculares.

  • We can illustrate it well from the ritual of another Italian city, Iguvium in Umbria, which, as I mentioned in a note to my last lecture, has come down to us in a very elaborate form.

  • On the principle of going behind the conceptual function altogether, however, and looking to the more primitive flux of the sensational life for reality's true shape, a way is open to us, as I tried in my last lecture to show.

  • Our ideal decomposition of the drops which are all that we feel into still finer fractions is but an incident in that great transformation of the perceptual order into a conceptual order of which I spoke in my last lecture.

  • The task which now lies before me is to consider how far that type of religion and religious philosophy, which I tried in my last Lecture to depict in outline, is represented in and sanctioned by Holy Scripture.

  • I have ventured to say in my last Lecture--and it is my earnest conviction--that a more general acquaintance with mystical theology and philosophy is very desirable in the interests of the English Church at the present time.

  • In my last Lecture I showed how the later Mysticism emancipated itself from the mischievous doctrine that the spiritual eye can only see when the eye of sense is closed.

  • These recorded experiences are of great psychological interest; but, as I said in my last Lecture, they do not seem to me to belong to the essence of Mysticism.

  • You will remember that in my last lecture I defined the concept of an abstractive set of durations.

  • Two events which have 'junction' in the sense in which junction was described in my last lecture, and yet are separated so that neither event either overlaps or is part of the other event, are said to be 'adjoined.

  • In my last lecture I have already investigated one class of abstractive elements, namely moments.

  • You will have gathered from what I had to say on this subject in my last lecture, and indeed you know as men of observation and experience, that it is comparatively favourable.

  • In my last lecture I read to you a short account of the case of a friend of my own who had had occasional attacks of gouty angina for 40 years.

  • There is, for example, the one with which I dealt in my last lecture, that the ministry gives satisfying and exhilarating employment to all the powers of the mind.

  • In my last lecture I spoke of the vast sphere of operations assigned to St. Paul and of the almost superhuman exertions which he made to fill it.

  • Barnard's cocked hat and black silk gown and seat in the clouds eclipsed the sweet face with which my Creator seemed to own me as his child, as I told you in my last lecture.

  • It will, perhaps, be remembered by those who did me the honour of reading my last lecture, which was printed in vol.

  • The table is arranged upon the same plan as Plate XIII of my last lecture, and is intended to serve as a continuation of Plate XII of the same lecture, showing a further development of the same weapon.

  • In my last lecture I mentioned that there were three countries in which the boomerang is either still used, or is known to have been used in ancient times, viz.

  • In my last Lecture, Gentlemen, I illustrated, at great length, the relation which the Philosophy of Mind bears to all the other sciences, as the common centre of each.

  • Recall for a few minutes the facts I brought before you in my last lecture.

  • A] You remember, in my last lecture, I rubbed together some pieces of wood, and they became sufficiently hot to fire phosphorus.

  • In my last lecture I shall return again to the relations of pragmatism with religion.

  • But the general triumph of that method would mean an enormous change in what I called in my last lecture the 'temperament' of philosophy.

  • Let me here recall a bit of my last lecture.

  • Alfred, as I noticed in last lecture, had built war ships nearly twice as long as the Normans', swifter, and steadier on the waves.

  • I was forced in my last lecture to pass by altogether, and to-day can only with momentary definition notice, the part taken by Scottish missionaries in the Christianizing of England and Burgundy.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "last lecture" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    certain animals; dark blue; immigrants from; last annual; last arrived; last autumn; last came; last century; last effort; last found; last lecture; last letter; last resort; last season; last session; last term; last the; last they; last visit; last will; last will and testament; last winter; last wrote; last years; struck him; sufficient quantities