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Discover LudwigThe phrase "audiences ready for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing whether audiences are prepared or receptive to a particular event, performance, or content.
Example: "The film's success depends on whether audiences are ready for a story that challenges traditional narratives."
Alternatives: "viewers prepared for" or "spectators set for".
Exact(5)
Mr. Lieberman, they say, effectively gets audiences ready for the vice president.
At least melodramas encouraged an expansion of theatre audiences ready for the most recent phase in dramatic history.
But that shocking bit of human theater does raise a question: Are audiences ready for the steady stream of movies and documentaries that bring a faraway war very close?
Or, the more pertinent question: are audiences ready for VR feature films?
Filmmakers Are Embracing VR, But Are Audiences Ready For VR Feature Films?
Similar(55)
Are the kids in the audience ready for this?
It requires an audience ready for a big adventure".
"There's an audience ready for this," Mr. Shanahan said.
It requires "an audience ready for a big adventure," he added.
The two Winterbottom-Coogan-Brydon movies deserve an American audience, ready for wit, that can play along.
Iconic lines from the film are given their appropriate due for those in the audience ready for them, and there's a knowingness to this production, enhanced by Cameron Mitchell's witty choreography, that brings the show up from "lazy nostalgia production" to "daring dark comedy".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com