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viewer

beginnerA1

/ˈvjuːər/ · view-er

A person who watches or observes something, especially a television program, movie, or some other visual content.

Meanings

nounformal

A person who watches or observes something, especially a television program, movie, or some other visual content.

ایک فرد جو کچھ دیکھتا یا مشاہدہ کرتا ہے، خاص طور پر ایک ٹیلی ویژن پروگرام، فلم، یا کسی اور بصری مواد کو۔

دیکھنے والا

dekhne wala

Formal: ناظر

Synonyms

observerspectatorwatcherنگرشاہددیکھنے والا

Antonyms

participantactordoerشرکت داراداکارعمل کرنے والا

Common Collocations

  • television viewer
  • active viewer
  • online viewer

Example Sentences

Many viewers tuned in to watch the live concert.

بہت سے ناظرین نے لائیو کنسرٹ دیکھنے کے لیے ٹیون کیا۔

Bohat se nazireen ne live concert dekhne ke liye tune kiya.

The movie received positive reviews from the viewers.

فلم کو ناظرین کی طرف سے مثبت جائزے ملے۔

Film ko nazireen ki taraf se musbat jaize mile.

As a viewer, I appreciate the creativity in this documentary.

ایک ناظر کے طور پر، میں اس دستاویزی فلم میں تخلیقیت کی قدر کرتا ہوں۔

Aik nazir ke tor par, main is dastavezi film mein takhleeq ki qadr karta hoon.

Easily Confused With

wanderer:While 'viewer' refers to someone who watches, 'wanderer' refers to someone who moves from place to place without a fixed home.

Word Family

view
verbدیکھنا
viewing
nounدیکھنے کا عمل

See Also

💡 Memory Tip

Think of 'viewer' as someone who is glued to the screen.

Imagine a person sitting in front of a television, eyes wide open, watching intently.

✍️ Urdu Poetry

ہم نے جو دیکھا اس منظر میں سچ بھی تھا، خواب اور حقیقت کی قید میں اب خزاں بھی ہے۔

Hum ne jo dekha is manzar mein sach bhi tha, Khawab aur haqeeqat ki qaid mein ab khizaan bhi hai.

What we saw in this scene was also true, In the captivity of dreams and reality, even autumn is here.

Unknown, Unverified

* Poetry attribution is AI-generated and may require verification.

🗣️ Urdu Proverb

دیکھنے پر یقین کریں، سننے پر نہیں۔

dekhne par yaqeen karein, sunne par nahi.

Believe what you see, not what you hear.

📖 Etymology

Origin: Old French "veoir" — to see

First known use: 16th century

The word 'viewer' evolved from the Old French word 'veoir' meaning 'to see'. It has been used in English since the 16th century to refer to someone who observes something.