Signification (Anglais)

  1. A person who reads.
  2. A person who reads a publication.
  3. A person who recites literary works, usually to an audience.
  4. A proofreader.
  5. A person employed by a publisher to read works submitted for publication and determine their merits.
  6. A position attached to aristocracy, or to the wealthy, with the task of reading aloud, often in a foreign language.
  7. (British) A university lecturer ranking below a professor.
  8. Any device that reads something.
  9. A book of exercises to accompany a textbook.
  10. An elementary textbook for those learning to read, especially for foreign languages.
  11. A literary anthology.
  12. A lay or minor cleric who reads lessons in a church service.
  13. A newspaper advertisement designed to look like a news article rather than a commercial solicitation.
  14. (in-plural) Reading glasses.
  15. (in-plural, slang) Marked playing cards used by cheaters.
  16. (obsolete, slang) A wallet or pocketbook.
  17. At Eton College, a lesson for which pupils are sent back to their separate school houses.

Concepts

livre de lecture

manuel de lecture

lecteur lectrice

professeur de faculté

recueil de textes

aboné

manuel de littérature

Fréquence

C1
Prononcé comme (IPA)
/ˈɹidɚ/
Étymologie (Anglais)

In summary

From Middle English reder, redar, redere, redare, from Old English rēdere, rǣdere (“a reader; scholar; diviner”), from Proto-West Germanic *rādāri, equivalent to read + -er. Cognate with Saterland Frisian Räider (“advisor”), Dutch rader (“advisor”), German Rater (“advisor”).

Notes

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