audience member
collocation in Englishmeaningsofaudienceandmember
These words are often used together. Click on the links below to explore the meanings. Or,see other collocations withaudience.
audience
noun[C]
uk/ˈɔː.di.əns/us/ˈɑː.di.əns/
the group of people together in one place to watch or listen to a play, film, someone ...
See more ataudience
member
noun[C]
uk/ˈmem.bər/us/ˈmem.bɚ/
a person, animal, or thing that is part of ...
See more atmember
(Definition ofaudienceandmemberfrom theCambridge English Dictionary© Cambridge University Press)
Examplesofaudience member
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
Of particular interest from the compositional standpoint is that theaudiencemembercan view and explore explanatory information prior to experiencing the work.
From theCambridge English Corpus
The speakers stand against the curved wall in our midst, and eachaudiencememberhears a different collage of whispers and chants.
From theCambridge English Corpus
Price's parallel-reading seems to me an imaginable ex-post-facto application for a particularaudiencemember, not a persuasive way of reading the text.
From theCambridge English Corpus
He hasn't even mentioned anaudiencememberthat he's observed, let alone questioned.
From theCambridge English Corpus
Few surveys asked about the content of productions or the experience of a patron asaudiencemember.
From theCambridge English Corpus
As anaudiencememberit was impossible to approach the cage without catching sight of oneself in the mirrors, without catching sight of oneself looking.
From theCambridge English Corpus
There is a sense of immediacy in the communication between artist and the individualaudiencemember, a commonality of feeling and conceptualisation that is shared.
From theCambridge English Corpus
The group's unindividualised identity remained intact, for the nameless singers there on-stage might just as well have included theaudiencememberamong their ranks.
From theCambridge English Corpus
How much the music may direct or reinforce verbal interpretation will of course vary drastically with the individualaudiencemember.
From theCambridge English Corpus
The individualaudiencemembermay or may not state or answer this question.
From theCambridge English Corpus
Pretending to be 'just a group of girls', the girl groups invite identification between theaudiencememberand the clique.
From theCambridge English Corpus
Clearly, these social excesses teemed with possibilities for satire and parody, to which eachaudiencememberwould nevertheless have responded in his own way.
From theCambridge English Corpus
She then addresses theaudiencememberfor clarification.
From theCambridge English Corpus
By setting up a series of theatrical situations (interactive behaviours), often socially charged environments, theaudiencemember(inhabitant of theatre space) is drawn to intervene.
From theCambridge English Corpus
Perhaps more importantly, it also invited theaudiencememberto identify herself with the members of the group.
From theCambridge English Corpus
As anaudiencemember, the player experiences both visually and sonically the actions of the object of focus and its environment.
From theCambridge English Corpus
The competences demanded of anaudiencemember, however, are demonstrably and repeatedly those of narrative.
From theCambridge English Corpus
All of her work, however, illustrates the visceral and meditative possibilities of listening and encourages a complete engagement in the sonic atmosphere by the performer and theaudiencemember.
From theCambridge English Corpus
Moreover, during the course of the exercise the unmasked partner can place him/herself in the position of anaudiencemember, if necessary going some distance from the mask.
From theCambridge English Corpus
The group, not any one individual, delivers the message(s) of the song, and theaudiencemembercan choose among the perspectives to find the one that fits her best.
From theCambridge English Corpus
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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See other collocations withaudience