Example sentences of "to [pron] audience " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I like the idea of presenting Sonic Youth to my audience . |
2 | Music-hall and vaudeville belonged not to ‘ humanity at large ’ but to its audience and that audience was hardly ever an exclusively working-class audience . |
3 | Within a few years the movies had added a significant number of other social groups to its audience . |
4 | She described the extraordinary tameness of the animals in the wild game parks and conveyed to her audience the beauty of the scenery . |
5 | Sex and sin were , to her , synonymous , and she wondered how on earth she was going to convey tastefully to her audience how much sin was in these volumes . |
6 | Was it to her audience ? |
7 | That was just how the circuit bosses liked things , believing that the best way to hold on to their audience was through ‘ family entertainment ’ , and arguing through the Cinematograph Exhibitors Association ( CEA ) that filmmakers should avoid treating themes and incidents that ‘ were offensive to the reasonable taste and standards of those whose patronage was necessary to the health and future of the industry . ’ |
8 | Those guys have been spoon-feeding this pure shit to their audience for so long , that that 's why they do n't have an attention span ! |
9 | Use of technical terms is one aspect , for example , of how cogently pupils can talk or write about a topic , how explicitly they can express themselves , and how well they can suit their language to their audience and purpose . |
10 | All pupils are able , to some extent , to change their style of language according to their audience . |
11 | What image of Tanzania and the world did they present to their audience ? |
12 | The fictional film had guaranteed that the showmen would hang on to their audience . |
13 | Irrespective of party , Home Secretaries are well aware that there are occasions when they are expected to appear ‘ tough ’ and take care to adjust their vocabulary and presentation according to their audience . |
14 | Now and again the walkway became even more narrow as a pavement café spilled its chairs and tables upon it , tempting the strolling shopper to stop for refreshment ; here and there a small crowd gathered around a solitary musician or a group of young teenagers singing , the plates at their feet covered in kroner as a testament to their audience 's approval . |
15 | He also had a feeling for phrase and idiom and a very personal way with English , all of which endeared him to his audience . |
16 | A soldier or airman on active service , or mariner at sea , can make an informal will , even by word of mouth , which will be valid provided that his communication to his audience was not a mere statement , but a request to him to see his intention carried out . |
17 | Remember what you 're here for , he told himself and turned back to his audience . |
18 | Rather than locking himself in his bedroom staring mournfully out of the window , Lemn reaches out to his audience , grabs them by the lapels , rapping and ranting his bitter sweet rhyming couplets . |
19 | The fact that he does not explain anything about them probably means that they were known to his audience . |
20 | As an extempore speaker he was able to tailor his words to his audience 's reactions and so convey the impression of personal conversation even when addressing thousands . |
21 | ‘ They do n't know what they want , not the young ones , ’ he observed to his audience . |
22 | Elvis is all things to his audience throughout his career , but the nature of the audience changes , and with it the nature and range of the articulations of the musical materials . |
23 | He lifted the curtain to his lips , kissed it tenderly , and then turned to his audience . |
24 | His published sermons reveal a man who was well versed in the Bible rather than in classical learning , with a clear and direct message to his audience . |
25 | ‘ I 've got a big stick , ’ mentioned Punch confidingly to his audience , as Judy appeared with her baby . |
26 | The meanness of his voice makes it particularly appropriate to his audience , because Bauthumley holds up his own discourse as a model for the voices of those who are normally rendered silent : |
27 | On account of this , very many cases from all over the world began to be brought to his audience so that he concluded several major cases in his time which were started long before . |
28 | The teller of the tale — who in real historical terms is Chaucer the poet — presents the monk to his audience with a heavy use of irony . |
29 | In what Ashley considered to be a shameless playing to his audience , the little boy bestowed another wide smile . |
30 | Did you notice that he actually came out and spoke to his audience tonight ? ’ |