lecturing
v. (向…)演講, (給…)講課( lecture的現在分詞 ); 責備; 教訓; (尤指惱人地)指責
A lecture is a talk someone gives in order to teach people about a particular subject, usually at a university or college.
...a series of lectures by Professor Eric Robinson...
埃裡克·魯賓遜教授的系列講座
In his lecture Riemann covered an enormous variety of topics.
裡曼的演講涵蓋了各種各樣的主題。
If you lecture on a particular subject, you give a lecture or a series of lectures about it.
She then invited him to Atlanta to lecture on the history of art...
她於是邀請他去亞特蘭大講藝術史。
She has danced, choreographed, lectured and taught all over the world...
她到過世界各地跳舞、編舞、演講和教學。
If someone lectures you about something, they criticize you or tell you how they think you should behave.
He used to lecture me about getting too much sun...
他以前常嘮叨我太陽曬得太多。
Chuck would lecture me, telling me to get a haircut...
查克就會數落我,讓我去理一下發。
1. teaching by giving a discourse on some subject (typically to a class)
The director is always lecturing Jim for being late.
主任老為吉姆遲到訓斥他.
He's lecturing a group of tourists.
他在向一群觀光者作報告.
She was no longer interrogating but lecturing.
她已經不是在審問而是在教訓人了。
Don't digress ( from the subject ) when lecturing.
講課時不要岔開 ( 主題 ).
He tried lecturing in California again with great success in the style of zany inconsequence.
他在加州講演,又非常成功,用的噱頭也是模仿丑角的滑稽.