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 readership ['ridɚʃɪp]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 读者, 读者人数



    readership
    [ noun ]
    the audience reached by written communications (books or magazines or newspapers etc.)
    <noun.group>


    Readership \Read"er*ship\, n.
    The office of reader. --Lyell.

    1. All have increased their spending as the mass-market Sunday magazines have expanded their readership to almost TV-size audiences.
    2. The column certainly stands out in the Echo, an otherwise routine prison paper relying on a captive readership.
    3. A measure of this is the surprisingly wide readership that exists for serious newspapers and books, and the discriminating audiences that fill theatres and concert halls every night.
    4. "We have evidence that readership of Newsweek declined" after the campus edition's birth, Mr. Smith said.
    5. By the end of 1975, circulation had risen to 450,000. The 800,000 circulation the magazine enjoys today suggests a readership of about three million, because copies are passed around.
    6. And it is this ugly truth that the government can't stomach." South serves a readership of about 15,000, primarily in the Cape Town area.
    7. Time's readership is estimated at 23.5 million because every copy is read by an average 4.78 people, according to Simmons Market Research Bureau.
    8. It remains to be seen what Mr. Bloom's readership does with it all.
    9. In June, he announced the Review would be shelved, citing deficits that the university could no longer absorb and limited readership.
    10. Mr. Castillo, 40 years old, was hired last October as part of a program to increase readership of the Herald by Miami's growing Latin population.
    11. In return, the News got to produce the news, sports and business sections of the Sunday paper, which has the highest readership of any edition.
    12. Stimulate readership by using graphic devices to highlight key phrases and topic sentences.
    13. True, her portrayal of homosexuals as central characters in her novels probably helped to change public and middle-brow attitudes, and she had a cult gay readership, especially in the US.
    14. The company has also acquired the English language rights to a new travel series by a French publishing house, the books containing up to 2,000 illustrations in seven colours. One trend that has helped is a readership swing towards the classics.
    15. "If they can get up in the 700,000 range with good pass-along readership, they can get themselves in the group."
    16. Like hundreds of afternoon papers, the Star has faced declining readership.
    17. While daily circulation is largely stagnant, Sunday readership is surging.
    18. By the mid-1970s, much of the Post's liberal, middle-class readership had moved to the suburbs.
    19. Reg Murphy, the publisher and chief executive officer of The Sun in Baltimore blamed a 10 percent drop in newspaper readership over the past several years on illiteracy, competition with other news media and competition for readers' time.
    20. Publisher Larry Hanson said the decision to switch was based on studies that show faster-growing circulation of morning newspapers, and a readership survey that showed growing preference for morning delivery.
    21. Hippocrates, like those magazines, has a strong upscale female readership, a group Time is eager to tap but doesn't reach with most of its own magazines.
    22. Time's Mr. Miller also said he expects little, if any, impact on total readership of the magazine, and "certainly" no impact on "the more attractive demographic segments."
    23. Her notion that features would build readership paid off _ the Post's magazine-style stories and pages of columns (at one point in the 1940s, the Post had nearly 50 columnists, including Schiff herself) had faithful followers.
    24. AT LAST the multitudinous globetrotters among the FT's readership can cease tapping their hooves impatiently, not to mention telephoning to demand 'where is it?'
    25. "I think the readership of that newspaper is too sophisticated to take that (ad) at face value," he said.
    26. News executives have long given lip service to the readership problem.
    27. Indications also turned up that increasing religious coverage likely won't do much to boost circulation, since religion-interested readers already make up the bulk of readership.
    28. Times Mirror publishes a number of magazines with heavy male readership, such as Field & Stream, Outdoor Life, Golf Magazine, Popular Science and The Sporting News.
    29. National Lampoon magazine suffered a readership decline in the early 1980s, but has begun to turn around, they said.
    30. "We measure readership, so we can tell when a reader reacts to something," he says.
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