Noun | 1. | ![]() bookworm - someone who spends a great deal of time reading bookman, scholar, scholarly person, student - a learned person (especially in the humanities); someone who by long study has gained mastery in one or more disciplines |
2. | reader - someone who contracts to receive and pay for a service or a certain number of issues of a publication | |
3. | reader - a person who can read; a literate person decipherer - a reader capable of reading and interpreting illegible or obscure text literate, literate person - a person who can read and write map-reader - a person who can read maps; "he is a good map-reader" skimmer - a rapid superficial reader | |
4. | reader - someone who reads manuscripts and judges their suitability for publication critic - anyone who expresses a reasoned judgment of something scanner - someone who scans verse to determine the number and prosodic value of the syllables | |
5. | reader - someone who reads proof in order to find errors and mark corrections | |
6. | reader - someone who reads the lessons in a church service; someone ordained in a minor order of the Roman Catholic Church clergyman, man of the cloth, reverend - a member of the clergy and a spiritual leader of the Christian Church Holy Order, Order - (usually plural) the status or rank or office of a Christian clergyman in an ecclesiastical hierarchy; "theologians still disagree over whether `bishop' should or should not be a separate Order" | |
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8. | reader - one of a series of texts for students learning to read school text, schoolbook, text edition, textbook, text - a book prepared for use in schools or colleges; "his economics textbook is in its tenth edition"; "the professor wrote the text that he assigned students to buy" McGuffey Eclectic Readers - readers that combined lessons in reading with moralistic messages |