[
US
/ˈɹɪtʃɝdz/
]
NOUN
- English literary critic who collaborated with C. K. Ogden and contributed to the development of Basic English (1893-1979)
How To Use Richards In A Sentence
- Richardson, are proprietors of shows, and the berouged, bedraggled creatures who exhibit on the platform outside for their living. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 327, January, 1843
- Brother Jonathan," then just published by Blackwood in three large volumes, was read to him every night for weeks, and greatly to his satisfaction, as I then understood; though it seems by what Dr. Bowring -- I beg his pardon, Sir John Bowring -- says on the subject, that the "white-haired sage" was wide enough awake, on the whole, to form a pretty fair estimate of its unnaturalness and extravagance: being himself a great admirer of Richardson's ten-volume stories, like The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No. 97, November, 1865
- Richardson claims she was libeled and her reputation as a professional interviewer has been irrevocably damaged.
- A person today who seems to have a great sense of self-esteem has his or her childhood days to thank for it. Stephen Richards
- In its scale and some of its details Smith's building has an affinity to Richardson's 1875-1876 Hayden Building in Boston.
- If you truly love someone, you should be more interested in keeping them happy than in being right. Stephen Richards
- The books written by Richardson and his followers accordingly became known as moral or didactic novels.
- Instead, they got Richards to acknowledge that a motivated forger with advanced technology could fool even veteran photo analysts.
- Months earlier a woman named Adele Richardson, aka Leda, had written in. Cruel Intent
- Richards confronts us unapologetically with all the seamier aspects of his life, to the point where the reader -- I refer here to myself -- finds himself asking: Why am I reading this? Peter Clothier: Keef