英:[ˈri:dəbl]
美:[ˈridəbəl]
英:[ˈri:dəbl]
美:[ˈridəbəl]
read·a·ble
ri d bl
readably (adv.), readability (n.)
词根:read
adj.read 有学问的
reading 阅读的
n.read 阅读;读物
reading 阅读,朗读;读物;读数
reader 读者;阅读器;读物
readership 读者人数;读者们;读者的身分
readability 可读性;易读
v.reading 阅读(read的ing形式)
vi.read 读;读起来
vt.read 阅读;读懂,理解
adjective
enjoyable or interesting to read.a very readable novel
capable of being read without difficulty; legible.Her handwriting is barely readable.
machine readable计算机可读的;机粕读的
redable(易读的)最早出现于15世纪,源自 read(阅读)(v.)和 -able(-able)。"有足够的趣味性以被阅读"的意思是在1771年之后出现的。相关词汇: Readably; readableness。
【修】可读取
The first known use of readable was in the 15th century
ready1 of 2adjective
prepared for use or action
dinner is ready
likely to do something
ready to cry
willing sense 1
ready to give aid
showing ease and promptness
a ready answer
available right away : handy
ready money
ready2 of 2verb
to make ready : prepare
readoutnoun
an electronic device that displays information (as data from a calculator)also: the information displayed
readingnoun
something to be read or for reading
a particular version
the number or fact shown on an instrument
the thermometer reading was 20 degrees
an individual explanation of something
readingnoun
something to be read or for reading
a particular version
the number or fact shown on an instrument
the thermometer reading was 20 degrees
an individual explanation of something
ready1 of 2adjective
prepared for use or action
dinner is ready
likely to do something
ready to cry
willing sense 1
ready to give aid
showing ease and promptness
a ready answer
available right away : handy
ready money
ready2 of 2verb
to make ready : prepare
ready1 of 2adjective
prepared for use or action
dinner is ready
likely to do something
ready to cry
willing sense 1
ready to give aid
showing ease and promptness
a ready answer
available right away : handy
ready money
ready2 of 2verb
to make ready : prepare
readershipnoun
a group of readers
readernoun
a person who reads
a device that makes a readable image
a microfilm reader
a machine for acquiring data (as for a computer)
a card reader
a book for learning or practicing reading
readernoun
a person who reads
a device that makes a readable image
a microfilm reader
a machine for acquiring data (as for a computer)
a card reader
a book for learning or practicing reading
readableadjective
able to be read easily
1 This readable and well-researched life celebrates Jefferson’s skills as a practical politician, unafraid to wield power even when it conflicted with his small-government views.
2 The biggest single hazard of all, however, is simply this: not being readable, and not being read.
3 And his novel is so readable and tidily constructed that, initially, you barely notice its increasingly improbable plot contrivances.
4 The end result is sobering, certainly, but important, readable and deeply humane.
5 Now the shadows become regular; the lattices generate ordered and readable silhouettes.
6 Bishop has never lacked good biographers, but Travisano has written a readable, appreciative book that does not analyze Bishop’s poems so much as read them out loud, admiring each line and beat.
7 The configuration files are readable ASCII text.
配置文件为可读的ASCII文本。
8 “As a guide to the various ways of thinking about abortion,” our critic Jennifer Szalai writes, “ ‘Scarlet A’ is readable and respectful — and therefore, in its own quiet way, revolutionary.”
9 How many times I've tracked game with the help of its soft, readable surface.
10 I am a few pages from the end of Tom Holland’s marvelously readable “Rubicon” and about a quarter of the way through Mary Beard’s somewhat more earnest “SPQR.”
11 “Kate did a huge amount of research and synthesized it all into something readable and personal.”
12 The aim was just to make multiple stories readable in a single book.
13 On one case, a dictionary definition is printed backward so that it will be readable when someone takes a selfie with the camera cases pointed at a mirror.
14 Shakespeare’s characters are much richer and more readable than someone as unforthcoming as Trump.
15 In Lawrence Ellsworth’s excellent, compulsively readable translation, “The Red Sphinx” is just the book to see you through the January doldrums.
16 But some is sight readable: “Apollo,” “The Prodigal Son,” “Romeo and Juliet.”
17 His mastery over his material makes the novel compulsively readable in spite of its epic scope.
18 If it isn't quite the stripped‑down tale of crime we associate with Westlake or Block, Joyland is endearingly compact – perhaps a quarter the length of a typical King – and immediately readable.
19 They’re compulsively readable, too, even when painful — first, because they do what good writing always does, giving us the sharp relief of recognition.
20 A splendid book to accompany a BBC series hosted by the eminently readable historian and art critic.