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单词 audience
释义 audience|ˈɔːdɪəns|
Forms: 4–6 audiens, 5 audenes, -yence, awdiens, -yens, -yence, 5–6 audyens, 4– audience.
[a. F. audience (13th c.), refash. form after L. of OF. oiance:—L. audientia, n. of quality f. audient-em, pr. pple. of audīre to hear: see -ence.]
I. Audience (abstractly). No pl.
1. The action of hearing; attention to what is spoken. to give audience: to give ear, listen.
c1374Chaucer Troylus v. 235 Now I am gon, whom yeve ye audiens?c1485Digby Myst. (1882) ii. 156 We beseche yow of audyens.1549Compl. Scot. xvi. 138, I refuse to gyf eyris or audiens to thy accusations.1607Shakes. Cor. iii. iii. 40 List to your Tribunes. Audience: Peace I say.1657Reeve God's Plea Ep. Ded. 14 To put audience into his ears, compassion into his eyes.1849Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 406 These teachers easily found attentive audience.
2. a. The state or condition of hearing, or of being able to hear; hearing. in (open, general) audience (obs.): so that all may hear, publicly.
c1386Chaucer Melib. ⁋83 Many folk..conseilled him the contrary in general audience.1470–85Malory Arthur (1816) I. 86 He said, in open audience: ‘This is your place.’1640Abel Rediv., Musculus (1867) I. 300 And uttereth these words in the audience of the congregation.1814Cary Dante 290 Thou in his audience shouldst thereof discourse.
b. with objective genitive. Obs. rare.
1626T. Ailesbury Passion-Serm. 1 Saint Paul..gained the audience of unspeakable mysteries.
3. Judicial hearing. Court of Audience or Audience Court: an ecclesiastical court, at first held by the archbishop, afterwards by learned men, called Auditors, on his behalf. The Audience Court of Canterbury is now merged in the Court of Arches. arch. or Obs.
c1425Wyntoun Cron. viii. x. 28 He cald til þe audiens Of Edward.c1500Lancelot 1649 That thi puple have awdiens With thar complantis.1541Act 33 Hen. VIII, xxxi, Constrained for appeles to resort to the audience of Canturbury.1726Ayliffe Parerg. 192 The Court of Audience held in Pauls Church in London.1809Tomlins Law Dict. s.v., The archbishop of York hath, in like manner, his court of audience.
4. Formal hearing, reception at a formal interview: see 6.
1377Langl. P. Pl. B. xiii. 434 Shulde none harlote haue audience · in halle ne in chambres.1599Shakes. Hen. V, i. i. 91 The French Embassador vpon that instant Crau'd audience.1743Tindal Rapin's Hist. xvii. II. 140 Being admitted to audience.Mod. The ambassador had audience of her majesty.
attrib.
1753Hanway Trav. (1762) I. vii. xc. 412 The throne in the audience-chamber is of velvet.1878H. Stanley Dark Cont. I. xv. 398 The court before the audience-hall.
II. An audience. With pl.
5. gen. An occasion of hearing. Obs.
1426Paston Lett. 7 I. 26 In any sermon or other audience, in your cherche or elles where.
6. A formal interview granted by a superior to an inferior (especially by a sovereign or chief governor) for conference or the transaction of business. Const. of, with. audience of leave: interview for the purpose of taking leave, farewell interview.
1514Earl of Worcester in Ellis Orig. Lett. ii. 69 I. 233 The king..gave me a good and longe audiens.a1674Clarendon Hist. Reb. III. xii. 253 The embassadours declined any formal audiences.1711Steele Spect. No. 298 ⁋5, I dropped him a Curtsy, and gave him to understand that this was his Audience of Leave.1770Junius Lett. xli. 216 He had a right to demand an audience of his sovereign.1844Disraeli Coningsby iv. xv. 184, I had an audience..with the Spanish Minister.
7. a. The persons within hearing; an assembly of listeners, an auditory.
1407W. Thorpe Examin. (R.T.S.) 51 There was no audience of secular men by.1519Four Elem. in Hazl. Dodsley I. 46 Such company..Will please well this audience.1667Milton P.L. vii. 31 Fit audience find, though few.1714Byrom Spect. No. 597 ⁋9 The rest of the Audience were enjoying..an excellent Discourse.1817Moore Lalla R. (1824) 128 He here looked round, and discovered that most of his audience were asleep.Mod. He lectured to large audiences in New York.
b. transf. The readers of a book.
1855H. Reed Lect. Eng. Lit. vii. (1878) 225 ‘Pilgrim's Progress’..has gained an audience as large as Christendom.1883G. Hamilton in E. C. Rollins New Eng. Bygones Pref. 1 This book is published with no thought of an audience.
c. transf. Listeners to radio programmes or viewers of television.
1928B.B.C. Handbk. 1929 259 The audience for broadcast entertainment has already far outstripped in size any other audience in the world.1936B.B.C. Ann. 85/2 The audience for the daily broadcasts to schools constitutes another special section of the public.1952Ann. Reg. 1951 400 Television's For the Children..won an avid audience.
d. attrib. and Comb., as audience participation, sharing by an audience in a broadcast programme, etc.; audience-rating, assessment of the audience of a radio or television programme; audience research (cf. listener research), see quot. 1951; hence audience-researcher.
1812Dramatic Censor for 1811 99 The hall, or audience part of the House, to comprise the segment of a circle.1940E. McGill Radio Directing x. 201 On audience-participation broadcasts the script is no more than a guide-post.Ibid. 203 An audience-participation program should never be built around a person who is not a ready improviser.1940Q. Jrnl. Speech Feb. 134 Experimental productions may teach the playwright..the importance of audience-reactions in the revision of a script.1948Penguin Music Mag. Feb. 52 Intelligent audience-participation is more and more possible.1950L. A. G. Strong Which I Never ii. 48, I was thinking less of intrinsic quality, of skill, than of what I believe is termed audience appeal. Box-office.1950Times 6 Sept. 2/5 An analysis by the B.B.C. Audience Research Department of the social grades of listeners.1951B.B.C. Year Book 144 The BBC maintains an Audience Research Department to advise it on the habits, tastes, and opinions both of listeners and of viewers.1955Koestler Trail of Dinosaur 91 The radio performances of a Bach cantata and of a sobbing crooner are compared on the same scale of audience-rating.1959Observer 8 Feb. 18/3 I.T.V...is now estimated by the audience-researchers to have an average daily audience or viewing public of 5,250,000.
8. A place of hearing, an audience-chamber. Obs.
1596Danett Commines' Hist. Fr. (1614) 344 He had built a publike audience, where himselfe heard the sutes of all men.
9. A court, either of government or justice, in Spanish America; also, the territory administered by it. (Sp. audiencia.)
[1622R. Hawkins Voy. S. Sea (1847) 158 It hath his governour, and audiencia, with two bishoppes.]1727–51Chambers Cycl. s.v., New Spain comprehends three audiences, those of Gaudalajara, Mexico, and Guatimala.1777Robertson Amer. II. 393 Supreme direction of civil affairs was placed in a board, called The Audience of New Spain.
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