What part of speech is reader?

Reader can be categorized as a noun.

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Parts of speech

  • 1. reader is a noun, singular of readers.

Inflections

Noun

What does reader mean?

Definitions

Noun

reader - a person who can read; a literate person
reader - a person who enjoys reading
reader - one of a series of texts for students learning to read
reader - someone who reads manuscripts and judges their suitability for publication
reader - someone who reads the lessons in a church service; someone ordained in a minor order of the Roman Catholic Church
reader - someone who reads proof in order to find errors and mark corrections
reader - someone who contracts to receive and pay for a service or a certain number of issues of a publication
reader - a public lecturer at certain universities

Examples of reader

#   Sentence  
1. noun If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, or the employee or agent responsible to deliver it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this communication is strictly prohibited.
2. noun An astute reader should be willing to weigh everything they read, including anonymous sources.
3. noun A careful reader would have noticed the mistake.
4. noun This poem calls for great insight from the reader.
5. noun Many a reader skips the words that he doesn't know.
6. noun It's the reader that determines whether they extract pleasure from reading.
7. noun I'm a bit of a reader myself.
8. noun I have been asked by a reader about free and direct translations.
9. noun The proof is left to the reader.
10. noun I'm an avid reader of biographies.
11. noun The demand that I make of my reader is that he should devote his whole Life to reading my works.
12. noun Only the assumption that the reader - I better say: the prospective reader, because for the moment there is not the slightest prospect, that my writing could see the lights of publicity, - unless it miraculously left our endangered fortress Europe and brought a hint of the secrets of our loneliness to those outside; - I beg to be allowed to begin anew: only because I anticipate the wish to be told casually about the who and what of the writer, I send some few notes on my own individuum out before these openings, - of course not without the awareness that exactly by doing so I might provoke doubts in the reader, that he is in the right hands, which is to say: if I, from all my being, am the right man for a task to which maybe the heart pulls me more than any qualifying relation in character.
13. noun Headlines are supposed to grab the reader's interest.
14. noun What effect do I want to have on the target reader?
15. noun Mary is a heavy reader.
Sentence  
noun
If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, or the employee or agent responsible to deliver it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this communication is strictly prohibited.
An astute reader should be willing to weigh everything they read, including anonymous sources.
A careful reader would have noticed the mistake.
This poem calls for great insight from the reader.
Many a reader skips the words that he doesn't know.
It's the reader that determines whether they extract pleasure from reading.
I'm a bit of a reader myself.
I have been asked by a reader about free and direct translations.
The proof is left to the reader.
I'm an avid reader of biographies.
The demand that I make of my reader is that he should devote his whole Life to reading my works.
Only the assumption that the reader - I better say: the prospective reader, because for the moment there is not the slightest prospect, that my writing could see the lights of publicity, - unless it miraculously left our endangered fortress Europe and brought a hint of the secrets of our loneliness to those outside; - I beg to be allowed to begin anew: only because I anticipate the wish to be told casually about the who and what of the writer, I send some few notes on my own individuum out before these openings, - of course not without the awareness that exactly by doing so I might provoke doubts in the reader, that he is in the right hands, which is to say: if I, from all my being, am the right man for a task to which maybe the heart pulls me more than any qualifying relation in character.
Headlines are supposed to grab the reader's interest.
What effect do I want to have on the target reader?
Mary is a heavy reader.

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