| 释义 | 
		Definition of viewership in English: viewershipnounˈvjuːəʃɪpˈvjuərˌʃɪp treated as singular or plural The audience for a particular television programme or channel. (电视节目或频道的)观众  the glory days of 90 per cent viewership in singular a potential viewership of 18 million people Example sentencesExamples -  Now, if public support dwindles with viewership, PBS could slowly starve.
 -  Since its viewership has dwindled, ABC had to depend on something other than ABC to get the word out on its new shows.
 -  In comparing media usage, online traffic growth coincided most closely with the rapid decline in television viewership.
 -  Other deals are tied to the development of interactive television and ITV viewership measurement.
 -  A lot of these problems would solve themselves if the public would vote with their viewership.
 -  The race telecast also kept pace with 2005's average viewership with an audience of nearly a quarter-million people.
 -  I would venture to say that television viewership would grow substantially.
 -  The channel's viewership is ageing, and attempts to attract younger watchers have yet to bear fruit.
 -  If anything, it will push up piracy and television viewership.
 -  A South African company will soon be engaged to monitor the channel's viewership.
 -  News channels get more viewership as people not watch them merely to catch headlines, but also because of their other non-fiction content.
 -  While certainly the cable channels boasted spikes in viewership, a swell of Web news users clicked offshore.
 -  It too heralded great critical response but low audience viewership.
 -  Television and televangelism usually work through viewership.
 -  His speech held the audience in the palm of his hand, including the wider television viewership.
 -  But even if not as many people could watch the games in person, the good news is that television viewership continued to grow.
 -  Even among Fox's core audience of conservatives, CNN has an edge in total viewership.
 -  Prime time programmes in various channels are vying for viewership.
 -  Indeed, can one imagine the reaction among the television viewership across Central America?
 -  There is little evidence to suggest increased television viewership is killing off reading.
 
 Synonyms market, public, following, clientele, patronage, listenership    Definition of viewership in US English: viewershipnounˈvjuərˌʃɪpˈvyo͞oərˌSHip treated as singular or plural The audience for a particular television program or channel. (电视节目或频道的)观众  the glory days of 90 percent viewership in singular a potential viewership of 18 million people Example sentencesExamples -  There is little evidence to suggest increased television viewership is killing off reading.
 -  His speech held the audience in the palm of his hand, including the wider television viewership.
 -  Television and televangelism usually work through viewership.
 -  A lot of these problems would solve themselves if the public would vote with their viewership.
 -  The channel's viewership is ageing, and attempts to attract younger watchers have yet to bear fruit.
 -  Other deals are tied to the development of interactive television and ITV viewership measurement.
 -  In comparing media usage, online traffic growth coincided most closely with the rapid decline in television viewership.
 -  Even among Fox's core audience of conservatives, CNN has an edge in total viewership.
 -  Now, if public support dwindles with viewership, PBS could slowly starve.
 -  Indeed, can one imagine the reaction among the television viewership across Central America?
 -  While certainly the cable channels boasted spikes in viewership, a swell of Web news users clicked offshore.
 -  If anything, it will push up piracy and television viewership.
 -  A South African company will soon be engaged to monitor the channel's viewership.
 -  But even if not as many people could watch the games in person, the good news is that television viewership continued to grow.
 -  Since its viewership has dwindled, ABC had to depend on something other than ABC to get the word out on its new shows.
 -  I would venture to say that television viewership would grow substantially.
 -  It too heralded great critical response but low audience viewership.
 -  The race telecast also kept pace with 2005's average viewership with an audience of nearly a quarter-million people.
 -  News channels get more viewership as people not watch them merely to catch headlines, but also because of their other non-fiction content.
 -  Prime time programmes in various channels are vying for viewership.
 
 Synonyms market, public, following, clientele, patronage, listenership     |