Lyceums [noun]
Definition of Lyceums:
institution of higher education
Opposite/Antonyms of Lyceums:
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Sentence/Example of Lyceums:
Born in 1797, he pursued a course of study at the Lyceum, to which he had obtained a scholarship.
And, if that wish is realised, the lessee of the Lyceum will be one of the happiest men on record.
Moreover, one would think that, as a professor at the Lyceum, he might even have got it gratis.
He fixed upon a place in the Lyceum highly beautified with avenues of trees, where he established his school.
That public opinion has been somewhat conquered, the reception given to women in the lyceum is alone sufficient to show.
Our country lyceum formed itself into a mock court, and tried King Alcohol for various crimes and misdemeanors.
I think the idea is to meet the governor and the general with automobiles and escort them up to the Lyceum.
"I thought that trail made a bee-line for the platform in the Lyceum," he said to himself, as he folded his five-dollar bill.
From the Lyceum she passed to the Haymarket, where she was treated as a spoiled child by the three old men who there held sway.
He had been president of the Lyceum, a dancing club, for many years, and nobody thought of having him supplanted.