What is the meaning of READE. Phrases containing READE
See meanings and uses of READE!READE
READE
READE
READE
READE
READE
Acronyms & AI meanings
multiple stations clinical examination
Family Intervention and Empowerment Program
Kyushu Okinawa Society for Underwater Archaeology
Individual Water Purifier System
Fair Rental Practices Owner
International Society for Quality of Life Studies
Eastern States Exposition
Chesapeake Bay Watershed Model
Chloro Flouro Carbon
Chicago Federal Information Technology Council
READE
READE
READE
n.
A regaining; recovery of something lost.
v. t.
To cause or direct to remain after having been marked for omission; to mark with the word stet, or with a series of dots below or beside the matter; as, the proof reader stetted a deled footnote.
n.
One who reads.
n.
A student closely attached to books or addicted to study; a reader without appreciation.
n.
A proof reader.
n.
A book containing a selection of extracts for exercises in reading; an elementary book for practice in a language; a reading book.
n.
A reader of lections; formerly, a person designated to read lessons to the illiterate.
n.
A reader of lectures or discourses; a lecturer.
v. t.
To regain; to recover.
n.
One who reads much; one who is studious.
n.
One who reads lectures on scientific subjects.
n.
An under reader in the inns of court, who reads the texts of law the reader is to discourse upon.
n.
One whose distinctive office is to read prayers in a church.
n.
One who reads copy to a proof reader.
subj. 3d pers. sing.
Let it stand; -- a word used by proof readers to signify that something once erased, or marked for omission, is to remain.
n.
One who reads manuscripts offered for publication and advises regarding their merit.
n.
The first word of any page of a book after the first, inserted at the right hand bottom corner of the preceding page for the assistance of the reader. It is seldom used in modern printing.
n.
A mark [^] used by writers and proof readers to indicate that something is interlined above, or inserted in the margin, which belongs in the place marked by the caret.
n.
The office of reader.
n.
A short poem treating concisely and pointedly of a single thought or event. The modern epigram is so contrived as to surprise the reader with a witticism or ingenious turn of thought, and is often satirical in character.
READE
READE