English to Gujarati Dictionary readership

readership

વાચકો
definition
noun
it has a readership of 100 million
the readers of a newspaper, magazine, or book regarded collectively.
By the time she published her next book, she had a Readership ; a chair followed a few years later.
the position of Reader at a university.
translation of 'readership'
યુનિવર્સિટીના રીડરનો હોદ્દો,
છાપાના વાચકો ની સંખ્યા,
યુનિવર્સિટીના રીડરનો જગ્યા
example
Thus, for an adoring 'readership' did Laurie Lee foster the myth we demanded.
These technologies also allow a wide 'readership' of certain precious manuscripts.
the magazine has a 'readership' of just 65,000
Much of this has to do with the growth of rural 'readership' and circulation in Hindi newspapers.
This is not just a result of the preferences of a mass 'readership' , who happily pick up stories but seldom read poems.
Newspaper 'readership' information is collated by the National Readership Survey.
In the Church Donne held several livings and the divinity 'readership' at Lincoln's Inn.
Consequently the bias of one reporter reaches a global 'readership' of millions.
A newspaper with an elderly 'readership' can see its circulation dying off with its readers.
Their emphasis is on practice not theory, and the intended 'readership' is made very clear.
As 'readership' grows, so does the competition, but pioneers are not used to worrying.
It is a pleasure to edit a magazine with such an intelligent and engaged 'readership' .
it has a 'readership' of 100 million
The magazine claims a 'readership' of 20,000, which means it probably sells about half that.
This is the day it is announced in the House of Commons by the Prime Minister, and certainly a number of newspapers, with mass 'readerships' throughout the country, have misunderstood it.
Moreover, Bonsall had been promoted to a 'Readership' in the meantime, and Goldie thought that it would be better to return to pure algebra, where he stood a better chance of doing more independent work.
The circulation rates and 'readerships' of newspapers greatly exceed those of medical journals.
A 'Readership' in Statistics was created in the Faculty of Agriculture to teach courses in that Faculty and courses in Mathematics.
By the time she published her next book, she had a 'Readership' ; a chair followed a few years later.
Mainstream newspaper publishers have been wresting with falling 'readerships' and generational market shifts for at least a decade, with little apparent success.
Research output of high quantity and quality would almost certainly be rewarded in terms of academic prestige and through promotion, to a 'Readership' or Chair, say, which may or may not have brought financial benefits.
Two years later, in 1967, Sargent retired from her 'Readership' and, unlike many mathematicians, seems to have given up research at this time.
As a Reader, he was not obliged to assume executive or even teaching roles - the 'Readership' being conceived, in the British tradition, as essentially a research position.
It denies the existence of different genres, different generations, different audiences and 'readerships' .
The fact that there is so little at stake in terms of financial rewards, book royalties and 'readerships' means that innovative writers can afford a little self-indulgence.
It plainly addresses different 'readerships' , either within the one nation or outside it.
As part of their strategy to build up the mathematics department, they appointed an algebraist to a 'Readership' , and two other staff to Lecturerships.
He returned to Bristol in 1946 when offered a 'Readership' there.
You compare the readership of ‘The New York Times’ to the 'readerships' of the other newspapers, and it compares very well…
There is absolutely no transparency in measuring the 'readerships' of newspapers or magazines for that matter.
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