Speech. the oral interpretation of written language.
the interpretation given in the performance of a dramatic part, musical composition, etc.: an interesting reading of Beethoven's 5th Symphony.
the extent to which a person has read; literary knowledge: a man of wide reading.
matter read or for reading: a novel that makes good reading.
the form or version of a given passage in a particular text: the various readings of a line in Shakespeare.
an instance or occasion in which a text or other matter is read or performed, usually without elaborate preparation and often as a means of testing its merits: The playwright wants to have a reading of the play for prospective producers.
an interpretation given to anything: What is your reading of the situation?
the indication of a graduated instrument: The reading is 101.2°F.
adjective
pertaining to or used for reading: reading glasses.
given to reading: the reading public.
Origin of reading
before 900; Middle English redyng (gerund), Old English rǣdinge.See read1, -ing1, -ing2
OTHER WORDS FROM reading
non·read·ing,nounself-reading,adjective
Definition for reading (2 of 2)
Reading
[ red-ing ]
/ ˈrɛd ɪŋ /
noun
Rufus Daniel Isaacs, 1st Marquis of, 1860–1935, Lord Chief Justice of England 1913–21; viceroy of India 1921–26.