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readership

/ree-der-ship/US // ˈri dərˌʃɪp //UK // (ˈriːdəʃɪp) //

读者群,读者,读者人数

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the people who read or are thought to read a particular book, newspaper, magazine, etc.: The periodical has a dwindling readership.
    • : the duty, status, or profession of a reader.
    • : the position of instructor or lecturer.
    • : the state or quality of being a reader: appealing to a higher level of readership.

Examples

  • Online publications often have much higher readerships than traditional media outlets, and as such digital public relations support increased visibility of your brand.

  • We’re a nonprofit, reliant primarily on donations instead of ad revenue, so we don’t chase pageviews and readership.

  • Protocol president Tammy Wincup would not disclose the publication’s financials from the end of its first year, but said that the publication’s total readership for 2020 consisted of more than 7 million uniques viewers.

  • The Collective’s demographics are similar to that of the company’s overall readership.

  • That then enabled her team to act on those behaviors and reach record readership.

  • Yet without money, without access, and without readership, that history McMillan seems intent on making will be absent.

  • Its readership expands in times when more of us need its particular brand of salve.

  • It has existed, over its long history, in both expanded and contracted states in terms of its readership.

  • Its contracted readership has not discouraged a larger group, maybe more than ever before, from writing it.

  • And as its influence and readership expands, the paper is feeling the wrath of Hollywood mega-stars.

  • In 1876 he returned to Oxford, where from 1883 to 1893 he held the university readership in Latin.

  • In the present day the readership is purely honorary and without duties.

  • After lecturing at the University of Toulouse he appeared in Paris in 1581, where he held an extraordinary readership.

  • The office of readership to this society had been offered to Cowper, but was declined by him.

  • It seemed that a heretofore unsuspected contingent of her growing readership was substantially obese.