Lecterns [noun]
Definition of Lecterns:
reading desk
Opposite/Antonyms of Lecterns:
-
Sentence/Example of Lecterns:
He then turned the lectern back over to press secretary Jen Psaki.
Additionally, someone who has a mutual friend with Johnson called the FBI to report that he was the man in the photo with the lectern.
Late Sunday afternoon, Rivera stood behind a lectern in a room outside the Washington locker room, looked into a television screen filled with the faces of reporters at his postgame news conference and exhaled deeply.
Very few people ever get a chance to kind of sit at the lectern and kind of essentially be the voice of a president for much of the world.
The lectern, as the pulpit-stand in English churches is called, was fashioned of oak taken from Nelson's flagship, the Victory.
Parson John looked greyer than usual as he conducted the service and stood at the lectern to read the Lessons.
The fine wooden lectern of very late Gothic design has well-carved angels kneeling on the four supporting legs.
The lectern he had done his best to burnish; but it was still a cripple from the fire.
There was nothing but the saw for these, and Carlton had already sawn the lectern from its grave.
The lectern yielded an oil-ball like that the ape-man had given him and another, similar device, containing grease.