Example sentences of "and the reader " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Even taped interviews can only be read with caution , since they may have been edited , and the reader will not be told how .
2 But they are brought together , in successive books , by the force of this preoccupation , and the reader has to make what he can of the resemblance between two figures quite remote from one another in any coarser understanding of the matter , to do this while adjusting his sight to a vista of copycats , impostors and successive interpretations — a vista which is far from unfamiliar now and can be caught , for instance , in the productions and reproductions of contemporary literary theory .
3 Perhaps because no photographer 's sense of composition or lighting has come between the subject and the reader , they manage to be informative as well as visually satisfying .
4 Well Miss Seles and the reader who wrote in defence of you , I would like to say this .
5 Her assumptions are broadly Crocean ; value appeared in the individual 's response to the particular work , but should not be erected into hierarchies , and the reader should cultivate ‘ the receptiveness and disinterestedness which are the conditions of aesthetic experience . ’
6 The falling of Burbank , taking us down the moral ladder , and the ‘ saggy bending of the knees ’ of Bleistein , taking us down the evolutionary ladder , lead to the declining ‘ smoky candle end of time ’ which prepares Burbank and the reader to ponder over ‘ Time 's ruins ’ , the etymology of ‘ ruins ’ being important .
7 Mr Medvedev does not moralise ; he does not need to ; but he can not resist commenting , and the reader can only , with sadness , agree .
8 Tony Geraghty twice mentions the disappearance of Leslie 's aircraft , and the reader will realise from the context in which Geraghty discusses this incident that a loss of this number of men from a small unit was a serious matter .
9 Although Mill may have been thinking of the romantic poet speaking gloomily to himself , here Leapor holds out the prospect of good gossip , and the reader is set to overhear the conversation :
10 The novel proves that knowledge is possible , but also that it is in a sense artificial : it does not come from the past , historical knowledge in particular can not simply be uncovered , laid bare and put out to view ( or rather , the novelist can no longer create the illusion that the past is speaking for itself ) ; it is a construction of the past , and the reader is conscious of , and in compliance with , the careful disposition and organization of the disparate elements that go to make up the whole edifice .
11 The first priority of any life insurance policy must be to provide immediate financial help for your dependents in the event of bereavement — and the Reader 's Digest DOUBLE PAYOUT PLAN meets this requirement with flying colours .
12 The information collated for stock revision purposes includes a record of the age of the stock , together with indications of the obsolescence level and the reader exhaustion level described above .
13 There are no complete instructions for any procedure and the reader would have to refer to the appropriate ASM method .
14 There are a number of fairly minor conventions and devices used , especially in the legal profession — the ‘ limit of legal memory ‘ , for example , being 3 September 1189 , the start of the reign of King Richard I — and the reader is referred to the list of printed works in the next section .
15 Some of the following may be repetitive to some extent , and the reader is asked to excuse this as the writer finds it difficult to avoid repeating some of his thoughts in a subject so fraught with difficulties of explanation , and covering such a wide field .
16 The writer ‘ encodes ’ a message , employing graphic signs , and the reader unravels , or rather ‘ decodes ’ that message .
17 Reading is not as simple as it seems , and the reader is not as passive a receiver as we once thought .
18 It does not match up to the image the writer and the reader have created together .
19 It seems particularly useful in books of poetry where specific illustrations may intrude and come between the text and the reader 's mental imagery , as Brian Wildsmith 's do in the Oxford book of poetry for children .
20 This derivation is parallel to that used to obtain ( 3.6 ) and the reader is asked to supply the details .
21 The optimal solution of AP1 is and the reader can verify that this corresponds to the tour 1→2→6→4→3→5→1 with length 20 .
22 She is the sort of girl made to die in a motor accident ( with another woman 's husband ) , and the reader is not shocked when Dermot overturns a car with her and himself in it .
23 This voice is Gandalf 's , though Frodo thinks he is dead and the reader does too .
24 Simile and metaphor , then , serve to form a bridge between the experience a writer wants to convey and the reader 's own experience .
25 In looking at him , Maria sees an aspect of herself , Pierre sees the outcome of the jealousy — a death — and the reader witnesses an internal struggle that has found a public stage .
26 Some of them are of necessity considered briefly — even in shorthand form — and the reader seeking further elucidation is referred to the sources mentioned in the text .
27 ‘ The style of writing is lively and straightforward , and the reader could not fail to be stimulated by the ideas presented . ’
28 The meaning is formed within the relationship between the text and the reader .
29 THESE questions , about men who have played an innings of 300 or more , are moderately easy , and the reader might like to tackle them without a reference book , at least to begin with .
30 In Vai script there are no spaces between either words or sentences and the reader has to become practised at separating out units of meaning without visual guides .
  Next page