See proof-listener in All languages combined, or Wiktionary
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"ref": "1958 March 6, Barbara B. Zauner, “Sisterhood Compiles New Cookbook”, in Bristol Daily Courier, final edition, volume 49, number 95, Bristol, Pa., →OCLC, page 12, column 1:",
"text": "“Proof-listener was Mrs. B. Morrison, Mrs. Norman Schnitzer’s mother,” the editor said. “We read all 250 recipes to her. She knew most of the traditional ones by heart.”",
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"ref": "2000, Sheree Bykofsky, Jennifer Basye Sander, Lynne Rominger, “Some Additional Pointers”, in The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Publishing Magazine Articles (The Complete Idiot’s Guide), Indianapolis, Ind.: Alpha Books, →ISBN, part 5 (A Short Course on Writing Effective Articles), chapter 18 (The Parts of the Article), page 203:",
"text": "Read your article aloud to yourself, to someone else, to the dog—it doesn’t matter. You’ll pick up awkward sentences and unclear references when you hear your work. We highly recommend the “someone else,” too. Your “proof-listener” may hear something awkward that you missed or ask a question that you forgot to answer.",
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"ref": "2000 April 2, Nancy Perkins, “This is a great newspaper, even though we slip sometimes”, in The Spectrum, St. George, Ut., →OCLC, page A4, columns 2–3:",
"text": "I listened carefully to this man’s message … several times. I wish he had left his name and number because I would have enjoyed visiting with him about his concerns. I also would have asked him to clarify the meaning of his last sentence. I’m not sure, but maybe a proof-listener would have helped …",
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"ref": "1958 March 6, Barbara B. Zauner, “Sisterhood Compiles New Cookbook”, in Bristol Daily Courier, final edition, volume 49, number 95, Bristol, Pa., →OCLC, page 12, column 1:",
"text": "“Proof-listener was Mrs. B. Morrison, Mrs. Norman Schnitzer’s mother,” the editor said. “We read all 250 recipes to her. She knew most of the traditional ones by heart.”",
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"text": "Read your article aloud to yourself, to someone else, to the dog—it doesn’t matter. You’ll pick up awkward sentences and unclear references when you hear your work. We highly recommend the “someone else,” too. Your “proof-listener” may hear something awkward that you missed or ask a question that you forgot to answer.",
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"ref": "2000 April 2, Nancy Perkins, “This is a great newspaper, even though we slip sometimes”, in The Spectrum, St. George, Ut., →OCLC, page A4, columns 2–3:",
"text": "I listened carefully to this man’s message … several times. I wish he had left his name and number because I would have enjoyed visiting with him about his concerns. I also would have asked him to clarify the meaning of his last sentence. I’m not sure, but maybe a proof-listener would have helped …",
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Download raw JSONL data for proof-listener meaning in English (2.4kB)
This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2025-11-18 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2025-11-01 using wiktextract (22806f4 and a050b89). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.
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