Read-across


noun
1.
a correlation or relationship between two separate things

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    Also, read a lesson . Issue a reprimand, as in Dad read us a lecture after the teacher phoned and complained . The first term dates from the late 1500s, the variant from the early 1600s. Also see

  • Readaptation

    [ad-uh p-tey-shuh n] /ˌæd əpˈteɪ ʃən/ noun 1. the act of adapting. 2. the state of being adapted; adjustment. 3. something produced by adapting: an adaptation of a play for television. 4. Biology. 5. Physiology. the decrease in response of sensory receptor organs, as those of vision, touch, temperature, olfaction, audition, and pain, to changed, […]

  • Readd

    [ad] /æd/ verb (used with object) 1. to unite or join so as to increase the number, quantity, size, or importance: to add two cups of sugar; to add a postscript to her letter; to add insult to injury. 2. to find the sum of (often followed by up): Add this column of figures. Add […]

  • Readdress

    [noun uh-dres, ad-res; verb uh-dres] /noun əˈdrɛs, ˈæd rɛs; verb əˈdrɛs/ noun 1. a speech or written statement, usually formal, directed to a particular group of persons: the president’s address on the state of the economy. 2. a direction as to the intended recipient, written on or attached to a piece of mail. 3. the […]

  • Reade

    [reed] /rid/ noun 1. Charles, 1814–84, English novelist. /riːd/ noun 1. Charles. 1814–84, English novelist: author of The Cloister and the Hearth (1861), a historical romance


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