Example sentences of "[verb] [conj] the reader is " in BNC.

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1 The writer of this sentence does n't know whether the reader is male or female , but has chosen to use " his " as a GENERIC to mean " male or female " , overriding the normal use of " his " as a gender-specific pronoun meaning " male " .
2 I hope that the reader is as awestruck as I am , and as William Paley would have been , by these bat stories .
3 It is not , however , assumed that the reader is familiar with ( either implementation of ) Guide .
4 A standard fault is to assume that the reader is familiar with the jargon which the designer habitually uses .
5 I suspect that the reader is by now getting confused or even angry .
6 The description of feelings and emotions are so well portrayed that the reader is able to feel with the character at every twist and turn of their lives .
7 Carpenter and Just [ 1983 ] showed that syntactically ambiguous words take longer to process than syntactically unambiguous words , indicating that the reader is trying to determine the syntactic role of the ambiguous word while fixating it .
8 It is assumed that the reader is familiar with the elements of thermodynamics , statistical mechanics and elasticity to the level of an honours degree in physics or chemistry but since continuum mechanics and viscoelasticity are not commonly found in such courses a detailed account of them is give in Chaps 2 and 3 , Chap .
9 It is intended for all levels of user , however it is assumed that the reader is familiar with LIFESPAN and its operation .
10 It is intended for all levels of user , however it is assumed that the reader is familiar with LIFESPAN and its operation .
11 The User Guide is intended for all levels of user , however it is assumed that the reader is familiar with LIFESPAN and its operation .
12 It is also assumed that the reader is familiar with relational database technology and the concepts and terminology therein .
13 The writer gains satisfaction from knowing that the reader is satisfied , and vice versa .
14 A great deal of pleasure and interest is lost if the reader is not able to form mental pictures of what is being referred to , however fleetingly .
15 Walpole also gives bounds for randomly oriented fibrous inclusions in an isotropic matrix but these are not easily stated and the reader is referred to the original paper ( Walpole ( 1969 ) .
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