Reader
in sentence
346 examples of Reader in a sentence
And my dad is the most voracious
reader
I know.
Dismantling the savage inequalities that plague American education requires us to create reading experiences that inspire all children to say three words: I'm a
reader.
It's communicating in a simple and clear way, enabling our
reader
to understand it at first glance.
I became a voracious comic book reader, but I never brought them to school.
This means that the rate of information flow is firmly in the hands of the
reader.
I mean, let's let the
reader
do a little work.
The book designer's responsibility is threefold: to the reader, to the publisher and, most of all, to the author.
So in the episode where he goes to Mars in a London bus, I can't show you the clip, due to the outrageous restrictions of Queen Anne-style copyright by the BBC, but in the episode where he goes to Mars in a London bus, Doctor Who is clearly shown getting on to the bus with the Oyster card
reader
using his psychic paper.
And you were, instead of going and finding the information and bringing it back to the reader, you were holding back the stuff that was potentially damaging.
The novelist Vladimir Nabokov said that the best
reader
has a combination of two very different temperaments, the artistic and the scientific.
A good
reader
has an artist's passion, a willingness to get caught up in the story, but just as importantly, the readers also needs the coolness of judgment of a scientist, which acts to temper and complicate the
reader'
s intuitive reactions to the story.
With numbers that small, I can fit thousands of books on my own little personal electronic
reader.
They were coming at a pretty regular clip, but as the story was building, normally, as a reader, you control how fast you move through a text, but in this case, The New Yorker did, and they were sending you bit by bit by bit, and you had this suspense of waiting for the next line.
In fact, reader, I married him.
This is a question I got from a reader, an anonymous reader, and the subject line just said, "Urgent," and this was the entire email: "If people had wheels and could fly, how would we differentiate them from airplanes?"
With this image here, a comment on the Olympics in Athens, I assumed that the
reader
of the "New Yorker" would have some rudimentary idea of Greek art.
What I want to do is create an aha moment, for you, for the
reader.
But then you need to step back and look at what you've done from the perspective of the
reader.
And I know I as a writer will often try to include a lot of empty space on the page so that the
reader
can complete my thoughts and sentences and so that her imagination has room to breathe.
I'm not a mind reader, I can see your name tag.
But Nico's the best
reader
I could hope for.
Any
reader
of Jane Austen would know that.
And third, I had to write the story in a way stepping into the
reader'
s shoes, so they could see how these trends could affect their lives.
When Mike Katz-Lacabe asked his local police department for information about the plate
reader
data they had on him, this is what they got: in addition to the date, time and location, the police department had photographs that captured where he was going and often who he was with.
In the U.K., the police department put 80-year-old John Kat on a plate
reader
watch list after he had attended dozens of lawful political demonstrations where he liked to sit on a bench and sketch the attendees.
And so I wanted the cover of this book to also misrepresent itself and then somehow show a
reader
reacting to it.
Whatever the reason, this means that every
reader
is free to judge; the question of who wins is up to you.
But those with dyslexia can physically change their brain and improve their reading with an intensive, multi-sensory intervention that breaks the language down and teaches the
reader
to decode based on syllable types and spelling rules.
When it's done well, readers can understand fictional worlds and their rules just as well as the characters that live in them do and sometimes, just as well or even better than the
reader
understands the world outside of the book.
How can human-made squiggles on a page reflect lights into our eyes that send signals to our brains that we logically and emotionally decode as complex narratives that move us to fight, cry, sing, and think, that are strong enough not only to hold up a world that is completely invented by the author, but also to change the
reader'
s perspective on the real world that resumes only when the final squiggle is reached?
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