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読む動詞 - 定義、画像、発音と使用ノート

原題: read verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes ...

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「読む」という動詞の定義、関連する画像、発音、使用に関するノートを提供する情報です。Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionaryに基づいており、辞書の利用方法やサインイン、アップグレードのオプションも含まれています。
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read verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes | Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com Oxford logo Toggle navigation Redeem Upgrade Help Sign in Dictionaries Dictionaries home English American English Academic Collocations German-English Grammar Grammar home Practical English Usage Learn & Practise Grammar (Beta) Word Lists Word Lists home My Word Lists Topics Recent additions Resources Resources home Text Checker Sign in Dictionaries Dictionaries home English American English Academic Collocations German-English Grammar Grammar home Practical English Usage Learn & Practise Grammar (Beta) Word Lists Word Lists home My Word Lists Topics Recent additions Resources Resources home Text Checker Redeem Upgrade Help TOP English English American English Academic English Collocations Practical English Usage German-English English-German English American English Enter search text Definition of read verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary read verb OPAL S /riːd/ /riːd/ Verb Forms present simple I / you / we / they read /riːd/ /riːd/ he / she / it reads /riːdz/ /riːdz/ past simple read /red/ /red/ past participle read /red/ /red/ -ing form reading /ˈriːdɪŋ/ /ˈriːdɪŋ/ Idioms Phrasal Verbs jump to other results words/symbols [intransitive, transitive] ( not used in the progressive tenses ) to look at and understand the meaning of written or printed words or symbols She's still learning to read . Some children can read and write before they go to school. read something I can't read your writing. Can you read music? I'm trying to read the map. see also sight-read , speed-read Homophones read | reed read reed /riːd/ /riːd/ read verb She can read Arabic, but she can't speak it. read noun Let me just have a quick read of what you've written. reed noun A saxophone is another instrument that uses a reed. Extra Examples He speaks and reads Arabic fluently. Most children can read by the age of seven. She had great difficulty learning to read and write. He learned to read when he was three. Some of the kids here can't even read and write. Oxford Collocations Dictionary adverb aloud silently carefully … verb + read be able to can learn to … preposition about from in … phrases read and write read for fun read for pleasure … See full entry [intransitive, transitive] to go through written or printed words, etc. in silence or speaking them to other people I'm going to go to bed and read. The book is very easy to read. read to somebody/yourself He liked reading to his grandchildren. read something to read a book/magazine/newspaper to read an article/a report/a letter/a blog/a review Have you read any Steinbeck (= novels by him) ? one of the most widely read books in the world I have read every single post in this entire thread. I didn't have time to read the novel. I just finished reading your recent article. He read the poem aloud . read something to somebody/yourself Go on—read it to us. Statements from police officers were read to the court. read somebody something She read us a story . see also proofread Homophones read | red read red /red/ /red/ read verb ( past tense, past participle of read ) Have you read his new novel yet? red adjective She's that girl over there in the red dress. red noun The red of the setting sun glowed on the horizon. Extra Examples I read the words out loud. Will you read me a story? What are you reading at the moment? She reads voraciously. I used to read to my younger brothers at bedtime. Could you read the poem aloud to us please? We teach students to read critically. She read from the letter. She read avidly from an early age—books, magazines, anything. I've just read your interesting article. I regularly read ‘Time’. I read a story to my son every night. I listen to my children reading aloud. He remembers everything he reads in books. She's not someone who reads for pleasure. He read her letter with interest. Make sure you read the instructions correctly. Oxford Collocations Dictionary adverb aloud silently carefully … verb + read be able to can learn to … preposition about from in … phrases read and write read for fun read for pleasure … See full entry discover by reading [intransitive, transitive] ( not used in the progressive tenses ) to discover or find out about somebody/something by reading read about/of something (in something) I read about the accident in the local paper. read that… I read that he had resigned. I read somewhere that women are starting companies at record rates. read something I can't remember where I read it. That's the most ridiculous thing I have ever read! read something in something Don't believe everything you read in the papers. read something on something I read it on the internet. Extra Examples Hogan had read about her death in the paper. I had read of the case in the local newspaper. I read about it in today's paper. Oxford Collocations Dictionary adverb aloud silently carefully … verb + read be able to can learn to … preposition about from in … phrases read and write read for fun read for pleasure … See full entry somebody’s mind/thoughts [transitive] read somebody’s mind/thoughts to guess what somebody else is thinking Tell me what you want—I can't read your mind! Topics Doubt, guessing and certainty b2 somebody’s lips [transitive] read somebody’s lips to look at the movements of somebody’s lips to learn what they are saying see also lip-read understand [transitive] to understand something in a particular way synonym interpret read something How do you read the present situation? read something as something Silence must not always be read as consent. of a piece of writing [transitive] + speech to have something written on it; to be written in a particular way The sign read ‘No admittance’. I’ve changed the last paragraph. It now reads as follows… [intransitive] + adv./prep. to give a particular impression when read Generally, the article reads very well. The poem reads like (= sounds as if it is) a translation. measuring instrument [transitive] read something ( of measuring instruments ) to show a particular weight, pressure, etc. What does the thermometer read? [transitive] read something to get information from a measuring instrument A man came to read the gas meter. hear [transitive] read somebody to hear and understand somebody speaking on a radio set ‘Do you read me?’ ‘I'm reading you loud and clear.’ replace word [transitive] read A for B | read B as A to replace one word, etc. with another when correcting a text For ‘madam’ in line 3 read ‘madame’. subject at university [transitive, intransitive] (British English, old-fashioned or formal) to study a subject, especially at a university read something I read English at Oxford. read for something She's reading for a law degree. Topics Education c2 computing [transitive] ( of a computer or the person using it ) to take information from a disk read something The computer could not read the disk at all. read something into something to read a file into a computer More Like This Verbs with two objects Verbs with two objects bet bring build buy cost get give leave lend make offer owe pass pay play post promise read refuse sell send show sing take teach tell throw wish write Word Origin Old English rǣdan , of Germanic origin; related to Dutch raden and German raten ‘advise, guess’. Early senses included ‘advise’ and ‘interpret (a riddle or dream)’. Idioms read between the lines to look for or discover a meaning in something that is not openly stated Reading between the lines, I think Clare needs money. read somebody like a book to understand easily what somebody is thinking or feeling read my lips (informal) used to tell somebody to listen carefully to what you are saying Read my lips: no new taxes (= I promise there will be no new taxes) . read (somebody) the Riot Act (British English) to tell somebody with force that they must not do something take it/something as read (British English) to accept something without discussing it Can we take it as read that you want the job? Phrasal Verbs read back read into read on read out read over read through read up read up on See read in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary See read in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English Check pronunciation: read Other results All matches read noun read adjective lip-read verb read-in noun read on read out read-out noun read up read back read into read-only adjective read over well read adjective read-write adjective sight-read verb speed-read verb read through read-through noun read up on read-only memory noun See more Phrasal verbs read on read something over read something through read something into something read something out (to somebody) read something back (to somebody) read something up | read up on somebody/something See more Idioms read my lips read between the lines read somebody like a book read (somebody) the Riot Act must-see/must-read/must-have, etc. Nearby words reactivity noun reactor noun read verb read noun read adjective pepper noun From the Word list Oxford 3000 A1 Oxford Learner's Dictionaries Word of the Day

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