I went to the auditorium to watch the show.
Most schools have an auditorium that plays are held in.
You could say... "I went to a concert, last night, which was held at the municipal auditorium.
When Marie finished her speech, an ovation rose in the auditorium.
The auditorium was so big that a whole circus can fit in there.
She went to the auditorium with her friends. if that's what u mean...
The possessive form of the word auditorium in a sentence that describes the curtains that belong to the auditorium, would be the auditorium's (singular possessive). If you wanted to describe 3 auditoriums with the same curtains, you would write auditoriums' (apostrophe s for plural possessive). The auditorium's curtains were gold with black trim. The auditorium's curtains were gold with black trim in New York City, but two other auditoriums' curtains in Atlanta, George were black with gold trim. I study auditoriums' curtains as a hobby, but I have yet to find one auditorium's curtains have polka dots.
Actually, "the auditorium curtains" would be correct, and does away with the need for the pesky apostrophe.
Yes, "Auditorium" should be capitalized in a sentence when it is used as part of a specific name or title, such as "Smith Auditorium" or "Main Street Auditorium." However, if it is used generically to refer to any auditorium, it would not be capitalized, as in "The students gathered in the auditorium for the assembly."
The speaker has a deep, orotund voice that can project mile and miles.
The word street is to sidewalk as the word auditorium is to audience.
The word is spelled auditorium. The students assembled in the auditorium.
The word "skirled" is the past tense form of the word "skirl. " An example of the word "skirled" in a sentence is "The bagpipes skirled loud enough that they could be heard not just in the auditorium but throughout the entire school. "