- An
orator, or oratist, is a
public speaker,
especially one who is
eloquent or skilled.
Recorded in
English c. 1374, with a
meaning of "one who pleads...
- The
Public Orator is a
traditional official post at universities,
especially in the
United Kingdom. The
holder of this
office acts as the
voice of the...
- (ceremonial or demonstrative). Similarly, the
Roman philosopher and
orator Cicero categorized public speaking into
three purposes:
judicial (courtroom), deliberative...
- lectureship, then
later a tutorship. He was
elected public orator in 1876 and was
given the
title orator emeritus when he
retired in 1919. He was awarded...
-
famous orator. He was
nicknamed Burbuleius (after an actor) for the way he
moved his body
while speaking.
Curio was
noted as a
public orator and for...
- the
intention of
becoming a priest, but he
became the University's
Public Orator and
attracted the
attention of King
James I. He sat in the Parliament...
- Gr****: Ἀντιφῶν ὁ Ῥαμνούσιος; 480–411 BC) was the
earliest of the ten
Attic orators, and an
important figure in fifth-century
Athenian political and intellectual...
- An
orator is a
person who
speaks in
public.
Orator may also
refer to:
Attic orators Given name
Orator Fuller Cook (1867–1949),
American botanist and entomologist...
- The
Orator, also
known as L'Arringatore (Italian), Aule
Meteli (Etruscan) or
Aulus Metellus (Latin), is an
Etruscan bronze sculpture from the late second...
-
foundationer at
Winchester College. He went to Oxford,
where he
became public orator.
Crowe was a
clergyman and
rector of
Alton Barnes in Wiltshire. He wrote...