Similar words: viewer, reviewer, interviewer, interviewee, view, view as, review, preview. Meaning: ['vjuːə(r)] n. the audience reached by television.
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(181) We are committed to giving our viewers and listeners context - to give them the where-with-all to make sense of the world.
(182) The next item will be of special interest to viewers who are dog-owners.
(183) Within every educational category, heavy newspaper readers are avid joiners, whereas heavy viewers are more likely to be loners.
(184) It was Liz's worst scenario coming true, in front of hundreds of millions of television viewers.
(185) Mac shows viewers how the big machinery works in the sawmills.
(186) The intent was to allow television viewers the greatest possible access to programming and to foster competition among providers.
(187) The dynamics of competition for viewers, readers or listeners provide no guarantee against the suppression of issues.
(188) The cost to the ad agencies ranges from 40 to $ 2 per thousand viewers.
(189) Even though older viewers do tend to have more money, they are less easily swayed by television commercials.
(190) Everybody, it seems, wanted to make friends with 18-to-49-year-old viewers.
(191) The station let viewers phone in and say almost what they wanted.
(192) Violence is a worry to no more than 11 percent of viewers of any channel.
(193) But viewers in Britain are unlikely to get a glimpse of Linda's high-rise exploits.
(194) Some shows are cancelled before they get a chance to attract any viewers.
(195) Some military remote viewers became bored with Earthly targets and began turning their psychic probing to bigger enigmas.
(196) Read in studio Viewers who are deaf or hard of hearing will be getting a new service from Central next week.
(197) This means that advertisers have to produce commercials that will be noticed and will motivate viewers to spend money.
(198) Viewers were told how to orient their satellite dishes to best receive broadcasts.
(199) It would also mean that viewers, their trigger fingers on the clicker, would have trouble avoiding the candidates.
(200) Also make sure you have old bills and any guarantees to hand. Allow the viewers to look around on their own.
(201) Every episode of Eldorado is still only watched by four million viewers.
(202) The unoccupied places around them must have given television viewers a picture of hosts abandoned by their guests of honour.
(203) The box has 10 tiny apertures through which viewers can see 3-D images.
(204) Millions of viewers saw presenter Howard Leader take the tumble wearing dark glasses and clutching a white stick.
(205) These scenes transfix us as they transfixed their original viewers.
(206) We not only face the heinous crimes dead on, we face our fellow viewers.
(207) Early indications are that most viewers are watching something else. Sentencedict.com
(208) Viewers in this country do get a fair picture of the debates and other proceedings in our House.
(209) With arms and hands constantly raised in gesture and emphasis, he pleads with viewers not to forget the edges.
(210) She was expecting a bill of no more than £50 for the short job, presenter John Stapleton told viewers.
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.