Similar words: viewer, reviewer, interviewer, interviewee, view, view as, review, preview. Meaning: ['vjuːə(r)] n. the audience reached by television.
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(121) This establishing shot sets the scene for the viewers and shows the family arriving for their day on the beach.
(122) Many viewers thought she'd used the famous Lawley charm to make him relax and talk about his childhood and family.
(123) Formula One is very big business, attracting billions of viewers and multinational sponsors.
(124) The choice presented to viewers tends to be between genres and subgenres rather than within them.
(125) Between commercials, they squeezed in the quick commentary and interviews many viewers had already heard elsewhere.
(126) But viewers soon came to rely on Central South as their major source of regional news.
(127) The success of the new News at Ten will stand or fall on his relationship with the seven million plus viewers.
(128) A well-publicized rival, Oxygen, just passed its first anniversary trying to reach the same viewers.
(129) The gadgetry enables the renegade network to give viewers a puck encased in a blue halo.
(130) Viewers were treated to pictures of skulls, arms, legs and dislocated bodies.
(131) His style was light and friendly; in no time he had built up a big following among the viewers.
(132) A TV programme about cruelty to children brought hundreds of letters from concerned viewers.
(133) The concert was seen by 500 million viewers around the world.
(134) By May, Tejano Country was running in most major markets in Texas and drawing 500, 000 viewers.
(135) The passive role of television viewers simply heightens its effect.
(136) In these samples, less than a few thousand people may represent a whole nation of viewers.
(137) Viewers are invited to fax in with their guesses about where Gaiman is holed up.
(138) He wanted her in vision far more; he thought she had the kind of personality that viewers would take to.
(139) It's difficult to describe in detail without spoiling the effect for future viewers, something that goes for the whole film.
(140) The West End and even cinema audiences were tiny compared to the huge passive mass of armchair viewers.
(141) Most officials have been as effective again this season as most players, coaches and viewers.
(142) Out will go the flowery descriptions of aspects, views and outlook which have always been so derided by disappointed property viewers.
(143) The jail is familiar to cinema-goers, television viewers and readers of detective stories.
(144) Multiplayer games are also available, allowing viewers to compete against distant friends or relatives on the network.
(145) To examine the work, viewers must decide whether to tread on a flag laid neatly on the floor before it.
(146) It's local news attracts more viewers than any other region.
(147) And last night they were branded spoilsports after claiming not enough viewers are interested in the national game.
(147) Wish you can benefit from sentencedict.com and make progress everyday!
(148) Some viewers with binoculars are seeing a faint tail three to four moon-widths long.
(149) Not as catatonic as the viewers at home, I fear.
(150) The crash was witnessed by millions of viewers who were watching the race on TV.
More similar words: viewer, reviewer, interviewer, interviewee, view, view as, review, preview, purview, overview, in view of, interview, viewpoint, world view, view point, viewfinder, book review, in the view of, peer review, in full view, with a view to, point of view, field of view, fewer, ewer, bird's eye view, job interview, panoramic view, sewer, exit interview.