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Audience   /ˈɑdiəns/  /ˈɔdiəns/   Listen
Audience

noun
1.
A gathering of spectators or listeners at a (usually public) performance.  "Someone in the audience began to cough"
2.
The part of the general public interested in a source of information or entertainment.  "The broadcast reached an audience of millions"
3.
An opportunity to state your case and be heard.  Synonym: hearing.  "He saw that he had lost his audience"
4.
A conference (usually with someone important).  Synonyms: consultation, interview.  "He requested an audience with the king"



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"Audience" Quotes from Famous Books



... Sir Jemant Wamal, who in rather a foolish speech tells the audience that they are about to hear a piece composed by Tom the poet. Then appears Captain Riches, who makes a long speech about his influence in the world and the general contempt in which Poverty is held; he is, however, presently checked by the Fool, who ...
— Wild Wales - Its People, Language and Scenery • George Borrow

... disadvantages. A lecture, by keeping a critical audience constantly before our eyes, forces us to condense our subject, to discriminate between what is important and what is not, and often to deny ourselves the pleasure of displaying what may have cost us the greatest labor, but is of little consequence to other scholars. In lecturing we are constantly ...
— India: What can it teach us? - A Course of Lectures Delivered before the University Of Cambridge • F. Max Mueller

... first of a course of lectures on German Literature, at Willis's Rooms, on Tuesday, to a very crowded and yet a select audience of both sexes. Mr. Carlyle may be deficient in the mere mechanism of oratory; but this minor defect is far more than counterbalanced by his perfect mastery of his subject, the originality of his manner, the perspicuity of his language, his simple but genuine eloquence, ...
— On the Choice of Books • Thomas Carlyle

... light of a buffoon? But why should I mention those places of hurry and worldly pursuit? What attention do we engage even in the pulpit? Here, if a sermon be prolonged a little beyond the usual hour, doth it not set half the audience asleep? as I question not I have by this time both my children. Well, then, like a good-natured surgeon, who prepares his patient for a painful operation by endeavouring as much as he can to deaden his sensation, I will ...
— Amelia (Complete) • Henry Fielding

... Beguiling.]—See Preface. In the original story he made them drunk with wine. (Aesch. Eumenides, 728.) As the allusion would doubtless be clear to the Greek audience, I have added a mention of wine which is not in the Greek. Libations to the Elder Gods, such as the Fates and Eumenides, had to be "wineless." Historically this probably means that the worship dates from a time before wine was ...
— Alcestis • Euripides


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