Definition, Meaning, Synonyms & Anagrams | English word READER


READER

Definitions of READER

  1. A person who reads.
  2. A person who reads a publication.
  3. A person who recites literary works, usually to an audience.
  4. A proofreader.
  5. Any device that reads something.
  6. A book of exercises to accompany a textbook.
  7. An elementary textbook for those learning to read, especially for foreign languages.
  8. A literary anthology.
  9. A lay or minor cleric who reads lessons in a church service.
  10. A person employed by a publisher to read works submitted for publication and determine their merits.
  11. A position attached to aristocracy, or to the wealthy, with the task of reading aloud, often in a foreign language.
  12. (chiefly, British) A university lecturer ranking below a professor.
  13. (advertising) A newspaper advertisement designed to look like a news article rather than a commercial solicitation.
  14. (in the plural) Reading glasses.
  15. (slang, gambling, in the plural) Marked playing cards used by cheaters.
  16. A surname
  17. A CDP in Nevada County and, Ouachita County, Arkansas, USA.
  18. A unincorporated community in Western Mound, Macoupin County, Illinois, USA.
  19. A CDP in Wetzel County, West Virginia, USA, named after the Reader Run creek.
  20. (obsolete, slang) A wallet or pocketbook.
  21. At Eton College, a lesson for which pupils are sent back to their separate school houses.
  22. (religion) Alternative form of reader ("a lay or minor cleric who reads lessons in a church service")..

6

8

Number of letters

6

Is palindrome

No

12
AD
ADE
DE
DER
EA
EAD
ER
RE
REA

16

54

126

108
AD
ADE
ADR
AE
AED
AEE
AER
AR
ARD
ARE


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Examples of Using READER in a Sentence

  • In fact, the ESS has become so central to game theory that often no citation is given, as the reader is assumed to be familiar with it.
  • Hypertext is text displayed on a computer display or other electronic devices with references (hyperlinks) to other text that the reader can immediately access.
  • Flynn described his father as a "keen reader" who took pride in completing the New York Times crossword puzzle in pen rather than pencil.
  • Unlike more common systems for transliterating Arabic, SATTS does not provide the reader with any more phonetic information than standard Arabic orthography does; that is, it provides the bare Arabic alphabetic spelling with no notation of short vowels, doubled consonants, etc.
  • The award is named after Alan Turing, who was a British mathematician and reader in mathematics at the University of Manchester.
  • Sometimes the author publishes a timeline of events in the history, while other times the reader can reconstruct the order of the stories from information provided.
  • An email client, email reader or, more formally, message user agent (MUA) or mail user agent is a computer program used to access and manage a user's email.
  • Typically called just ruby or rubi, such annotations are most commonly used as pronunciation guides for characters that are likely to be unfamiliar to the reader.
  • Optical character recognition or optical character reader (OCR) is the electronic or mechanical conversion of images of typed, handwritten or printed text into machine-encoded text, whether from a scanned document, a photo of a document, a scene photo (for example the text on signs and billboards in a landscape photo) or from subtitle text superimposed on an image (for example: from a television broadcast).
  • Throughout the mid-to-late 20th century, it greatly expanded its layout and format, adding opinion columns, special reports, political cartoons, reader letters, cover stories, art critique, book reviews, and technology features.
  • The postmodernist narrative, in the form of a frame story, is about the reader trying to read a book called If on a winter's night a traveler.
  • It is told from the perspective of an unnamed storyteller/narrator, who speaks casually and frankly to the reader, frequently adding his own commentary on characters' motivations and the like.
  • These followers lose awareness of the world around them, and through the narrator's increasingly unreliable accounts, the reader gets an impression of the world's collapse.
  • The protagonist is the character whose fate is most closely followed by the reader or audience, and who is opposed by the antagonist.
  • The reader or viewer is provided with the clues to the case, from which the identity of the perpetrator may be deduced before the story provides the revelation itself at its climax.
  • The moral may be left to the hearer, reader, or viewer to determine for themselves, or may be explicitly encapsulated in a maxim.
  • Most of the characters in the novel are Jewish, and the reader gets a vivid picture of the lives of assimilated Jews in the U.
  • In the context of journalism, a sound bite is characterized by a short phrase or sentence that captures the essence of what the speaker was trying to say, and is used to summarize information and entice the reader or viewer.
  • Legal writers use citation signals to tell readers how the citations support (or do not support) their propositions, organizing citations in a hierarchy of importance so the reader can quickly determine the relative weight of a citation.
  • Wikipedia convention is to use the Soviet or Russian names and designations for these aircraft, not the post-World War II NATO reporting names, although these will be used as redirects to guide the reader to the desired article.


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