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rostrum (n.)

1540s, from Latin rostrum, name of the platform stand for public speakers in the Forum in ancient Rome. It was decorated with the beaks of ships taken in the first naval victory of the Roman republic, over Antium, in 338 B.C.E., and the word's older sense is "end of a ship's prow," literally "beak, muzzle, snout," originally "means of gnawing," instrument noun form of rodere "to gnaw" (possibly from an extended form of PIE root *red- "to scrape, scratch, gnaw"). Compare claustrum "lock, bar," from claudere "to shut." Extended sense of any platform for public speaking is first recorded 1766. Classical plural form is rostra.

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Definitions of rostrum from WordNet

rostrum (n.)
a platform raised above the surrounding level to give prominence to the person on it;
Synonyms: dais / podium / pulpit / ambo / stump / soapbox
rostrum (n.)
beaklike projection of the anterior part of the head of certain insects such as e.g. weevils;
Synonyms: snout
From wordnet.princeton.edu