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Realer vs Reader - What's the difference?

realer | reader |

As an adjective realer

is (real).

As a noun reader is

(religion) a person who is not ordained but is appointed to lead most services in the anglican church.

realer

English

Alternative forms

* (rare) realler

Adjective

(head)
  • (real)
  • * 1903 January, William Dean Howells, "Mr. Henry James’s Later Work", in The North American Review , University of Northern Iowa, page 126,
  • Even those martyr-women who have stood by him in the long course of his transgressions, and maintained through thick and thin, that he is by all odds the novelist whom they could best trust with the cause of woman in fiction, have liked his anti-heroines more,—I mean, found them realer ,—than his heroines.
  • * 1956, , These Thousand Hills , Mariner Books (1995), ISBN 0-395-75520-4, page 180,
  • Those were the eyes remembered, the eyes of Rising Moon, father of Little Runner, who had prayed for his son in a time realer than this one and had seen the prayer answered and gone on his way, friend out of enemy.
  • * 2007, Diane Setterfield, The Thirteenth Tale , Simon and Schuster, ISBN 1416547002, page 464,
  • With the future glowing so brightly it seems realer than the present, I put the page from Jane Eyre in the game bag as well, for safekeeping, and a spoon that is on the kitchen table.

    Usage notes

    * The word realer'' is not so common as the phrase ''more real , especially in formal contexts. ----

    reader

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A person who reads a publication.
  • A person who recites literary works, usually to an audience.
  • A proofreader.
  • (chiefly, British) A university lecturer below a professor.
  • Any device that reads something.
  • a card reader''''', ''a microfilm '''reader
  • A book of exercises to accompany a textbook.
  • A literary anthology.
  • A lay or minor cleric who reads lessons in a church service.
  • A newspaper advertisement designed to look like an news article rather than a commercial solicitation.
  • Derived terms

    * early reader

    Anagrams

    * * * English agent nouns