readability

[ US /ˌɹidəˈbɪɫɪti/ ]
[ UK /ɹˌiːdəbˈɪlɪti/ ]
NOUN
  1. a quality of writing (print or handwriting) that can be easily read
  2. the quality of written language that makes it easy to read and understand
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use readability In A Sentence

  • This in turn gives the galvanometer a greater readability, and by keeping the mass and inertia of the actual moving element low, a greater sensitivity.
  • With a readability that does not undermine its scholarliness, The Hindus marshalls significant historical and textual detail to establish the undeniable multiplicity not only of Hindu beliefs, but also of religious texts. The Hindus: An Alternative History by Wendy Doniger – review
  • The sense of unreadability derives not just from the urban layout, or (it must be said) from the fact that I am foreign, but from the sheer scale and speed of redevelopment.
  • By creating a simple color bar behind the text we increase the readability by leaps and bounds and still maintain a stylish looking slide.
  • I love excellent writing, I love wit, I hate pretension, and in some cases I find the Booker tends toward books that enjoy the term literary far too much at the expense of readability; not always but sometimes. Two Great Books
  • Goto might improve readability by allowing the value to be returned directly: mathFunction (operator, aVar, bVar) {answer: = mathFunction_ (operator, aVar, bVar) msgbox, % answer% return answer mathFunction_ (operator, aVar, bVar) { AutoHotkey Community
  • This might be understood as a defeatist response to the ideology of ‘difficulty’ and ‘unreadability’, air-brushed by the oxygen of privacy and the pleasing ether of hermeticism.
  • Aside from that, the main attractions of the earlier Brewer were its eminent readability, its obscure references, its curiosities, and its browsability. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XVIII No 4
  • unreadability" of her narrative, as it is manifested in Mathilda's alienation from the poetry she cites and the literary world it embodies as personified in Attached to Reading: Mary Shelley's Psychical Reality
  • The collectibility of the first printing of the first edition was established in the early days of printing, when the lead type used in the presses would quickly wear away, compromising the readability of the book being printed. Book Terminology: A to Z
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy