Readers
in sentence
378 examples of Readers in a sentence
Now, like Jelinek, whose work was largely unknown to non-German
readers
until she won the Nobel, Alexievich is finally being recognized for her profound impact.
Hence, if you were starting a newspaper in the print era, it was generally wise to underprice it until you had built up a large base of loyal
readers.
This often makes for manipulative media that distort and mislead in the pursuit of
readers
and ratings.
The Guardian counsels readers: “Want to fight climate change?
Although some
readers
might not care for gossipy reports of brusque bellboys in Berlin or malfunctioning hotel hairdryers in Houston, the true power of online reviews lies not just in the individual stories, but in the Web sites’ capacity to aggregate a large volume of ratings.
Some
readers
may say that the granddaughter of Nikita Khrushchev, who, it is falsely said, gaveled his shoe on a desk at the United Nations General Assembly in 1960, should steer clear of the topic of world leaders’ manners.
Extreme AltruismPRINCETON – More than 40 years ago, in an essay entitled “Famine, Affluence, and Morality,” I invited
readers
to imagine that they are walking past a shallow pond when they see a small child who has fallen in and seems to be drowning.
What I did not expect was the speed and scale of the reaction – almost a million
readers
within a week and far too many written responses and TV, radio, and blog debates for me to follow – and its global scope.
Editors get a frisson of excitement from worrying their
readers.
Organizers of Bali’s renowned Ubud Writers and
Readers
Festival have just had a foretaste of what may be a new round of active censorship, with local officials threatening to cancel the entire festival if proposed panel discussions of the massacres went ahead.
It goes beyond the headline-grabbing “1%” debate to show that even the everyday inequality that most Americans face – between the incomes of, say, typical
readers
of this commentary and the rest – has deep pernicious effects.
Worthy though these attempts are, they suffer from an inherent weakness: they still place responsibility on
readers
to check whether a news story is true.
Whereas readers, listeners, and viewers were customers paying for some commodity, commercial electronic media learned how to profit by transacting directly with vendors while reducing us, and our data, to a passive commodity at the heart of the transaction.
Some were experts on the Greek classics, others on ancient Hebrew; all were keen
readers
of Kant and Voltaire.
In fact, the free-market “Anglo-Saxon” attitude sounds like nothing so much as the old prejudices about the French that have been around since the novelist Thackeray told English readers: “The Frenchman has after his soup a dish of vegetables, where you have one of meat.
You can think of the paradox in another way: we live in an era when knowledge – in the sense of information – is constantly available in real time through computers, smart phones, electronic tablets, and book
readers.
No time period is specified, but many
readers
will assume that the world gives “hundreds of billions of dollars” of aid each year.
The next day, his words were reported widely; the behavior of the crowd, however, was not, leaving
readers
with the impression that their prime minister had, completely unprompted, yelled coarsely at Japanese citizens.
There is no way to disguise the reality: newspaper readers, in the West at least, are getting older; younger
readers
prefer to get their information online, where
readers
spend far less time actually reading news than print
readers
do; and, most agonizingly of all for the industry, people who were willing to pay for newspapers are unwilling to pay for the same content on a screen.
As more citizens become documentarians, online newspapers will have to curate their work to reflect reality on a level of visual urgency that new
readers
take for granted.
To be sure, I have been exposed to flimsy sources, and newspapers of the future should help
readers
learn what a good source is, and what good citizen journalism requires.
But I do know that that goal is far more likely to be achieved if newspapers take their
readers
seriously and train them as documentarians of their own communities and of their own moments.
Readers
in other countries may be tempted to react to this judgment with a dose of schadenfreude, finding more than a little satisfaction in America’s difficulties.
The news media’s tendency to fixate on new records serves their short-term interest in creating the impression that something really important has happened that justifies readers’ or viewers’ attention.
A close reading of Hamilton’s accomplishments, however, will remind European
readers
that there was an equally deep aversion to federalism in the early US.
Most
readers
of this article will be dead before it is reached.
Beyond the licensing and hiring requirements, the amendment holds Web-site owners and editors personally responsible for all content, including readers’ comments.
Forty years is a long time, but it is worth looking back and reminding ourselves of how much Galbraith and his
readers
had to be uncertain about.
Very often, the news cycle is driven by assumptions about what viewers or
readers
might like, rather than what they actually want.
Paul Krugman and the Obama RecoveryNEW YORK – For several years, and often several times a month, the Nobel laureate economist and New York Times columnist and blogger Paul Krugman has delivered one main message to his loyal readers: deficit-cutting “austerians” (as he calls advocates of fiscal austerity) are deluded.
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