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colloquium
[ kuh-loh-kwee-uhm ]
noun
- a conference at which scholars or other experts present papers on, analyze, and discuss a specific topic.
colloquium
/ kəˈləʊkwɪəm /
noun
- an informal gathering for discussion
- an academic seminar
Word History and Origins
Origin of colloquium1
Word History and Origins
Origin of colloquium1
Example Sentences
Ms. Rosenbury defended counting guest speakers as part-time faculty, saying it fell within A.B.A. standards because they were “practicing lawyers, judges and colloquium speakers” whose participation was integral to courses.
It's called the Sage Lodge in Pray, Montana, and it’s where George Mason University sends gaggles of federal judges for a week-long “colloquium” every year or so.
Abu Sitta had been invited by France’s left-wing Ecologists group in the Senate to speak at a colloquium Saturday about the situation in Gaza, according to the Senate press service.
More centers on campuses to promote discussion among viewpoints would only add to the ongoing debates that occur in seminars, faculty meetings, committees of various sorts and guest colloquiums.
As a result, Ms. Buckley received an email from another graduate student saying that the department “has refused to extend to you a formal offer to speak at our colloquium.”
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