The phrase
"full auditorium" means that all the seats in the large room where people gather to watch a performance, lecture, or event are occupied by an audience.
Full definition
«They're having massive protests over there,» Trump told a mostly
full auditorium in Winston - Salem, N.C. «We had a great convention.
Speaking to a
nearly full auditorium about the college's financial crisis, board chair Mark Epstein opened by saying there was no culprit, that «the problem is a systemic deficit.»
Last June the enthusiasm was palpable as more than 60 students sang and danced before
a full auditorium at Clinton Elementary.
Speaking to
a full auditorium on the National Institutes of Health's (NIH's) Bethesda campus, Charles Rosenberg, a professor of the history of science at Harvard University, delivered the inaugural talk on 18 July 2002.
For two hours, the professor lectured to
a full auditorium.
In a lecture Wednesday night to
a full auditorium at the UCLA Hammer Museum, Pittman simply said, «De-skilling doesn't really work with paintings.»
Dodd, this year's Donald J. Gordon Visiting Artist, also delivered an artist's talk that evening to
a full auditorium in LPAC cinema.