[
UK
/sɪmpˈəʊsiəm/
]
[ US /sɪmˈpoʊziəm/ ]
[ US /sɪmˈpoʊziəm/ ]
NOUN
- a meeting or conference for the public discussion of some topic especially one in which the participants form an audience and make presentations
How To Use symposium In A Sentence
- We stagger round with the Platonic idea (from the Symposium) that we can love only one other person.
- Among other things, it's got a continuing symposium on legal education featuring essays from some of the brighter legal minds in the country.
- The following papers are contributions to a symposium on these topics presented at the 1999 meetings of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.
- He is the only confessed believer in this symposium of essays.
- In this article, I shall not attempt to deal with all of the areas covered by these differences, nor with the essays of all twelve contributors to Meyer's symposium.
- Black it certainly is; funny it certainly is, but, in reality, it is more of a symposium of anarchic, iconoclastic humour than a comedy in the pure sense of the word.
- I'll organize trade fairs and symposiums, prepare all marketing materials, and arrange appointments for our company with its business partners.
- Plato in his Symposium discusses only the kind of love that is found in men, which has its final cause in the lover but not in the beloved (terminato ne l'amante ma non ne l'amato), for this kind mainly is called love, since that which ends in the loved one is called friendship and benevolence (ché quel che si termina ne l'amato si chiama amicizia e benivolenzia). Judah Abrabanel
- The scope of the symposium: To present to a wide audience research that relates to Kjartan Magnússon's main interests within biomathematics.
- It is precisely in this "Fatima-event" - now in the course of an international Mariological symposium-that we wish to discern and describe the presence of various aspects of the mystery of the Redemption and Coredemption. Latest Articles