The professor delivered an engaging lecture on the history of art to the students in the auditorium.
lecture has 2 syllable
In French, "lecture" is a feminine noun.
The past participle of the verb "lecture" is "lectured."
The plural noun for lecture is lectures.For example: The student attended four lectures a day.
Neither one sounds correct in basic English. Instead, one would probably say, "the lecture Jiff gave yesterday," or "yesterday's lecture, which was delivered by Jiff."
however
A scentence for unlikely is: He has a good reputation for being a liar, so it is unlikely he is telling the truth this time.
Maybe because, what if the word also is the first word of the scentence. You also don't use it when you have a scentence like: I also like bananas and strawberries. What I mean is, is that it depends on the scentence.
its Thirty-fifth if in the middle of a scentence and it's Thirty-Fifths if it's the beggining of a scentence
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You don't.
I talked earnestly.
a sentence is a long word thingy
To cite lecture notes in MLA format, include the lecturer's name, the title of the lecture in quotation marks, the course name, the date of the lecture, and the location of the lecture. For example: Last name, First name. "Title of Lecture." Course Name, Date of Lecture, Location of Lecture.
-Lecturing -Lectured _________ Or simply: to lecture. Lecture is a verb its forms are: lecture / lectures / lectured / lecturing
forum lecture
lecture recital