Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Read

Read (rēd) , noun

Rennet. See 3d Reed. [Provincial English]

Read (rēd) , transitive verb

[Old English reden, raden, Anglo-Saxon radan to read, advise, counsel, from rad advice, counsel, radan (imperf. reord) to advise, counsel, guess; akin to Dutch raden to advise, German raten, rathen, Icelandic rāea, Gothic rēdan (in comp.), and perh. also to Sanskrit rādh to succeed. r116. Compare Riddle.]

1.
To advise; to counsel. [Obsolete]
Therefore, I read thee, get thee to God's word, and thereby try all doctrine. — Tyndale
2.
To interpret; to explain; as, to read a riddle.
3.
To tell; to declare; to recite. [Obsolete]
But read how art thou named, and of what kin. — Spenser
4.
To go over, as characters or words, and utter aloud, or recite to one's self inaudibly; to take in the sense of, as of language, by interpreting the characters with which it is expressed; to peruse; as, to read a discourse; to read the letters of an alphabet; to read figures; to read the notes of music, or to read music; to read a book.
Redeth [read ye] the great poet of Itaille. — Chaucer
Well could he rede a lesson or a story. — Chaucer
5.
Hence, to know fully; to comprehend.
Who is't can read a woman? — Shakespeare
6.
To discover or understand by characters, marks, features, etc.; to learn by observation.
An armed corse did lie, In whose dead face he read great magnanimity. — Spenser
Those about her From her shall read the perfect ways of honor. — Shakespeare
7.
To make a special study of, as by perusing textbooks; as, to read theology or law.
Collocations (1)
To read one's self in , to read aloud the Thirty-nine Articles and the Declaration of Assent, -- required of a clergyman of the Church of England when he first officiates in a new benefice.

Read , intransitive verb

1.
To give advice or counsel. [Obsolete]
2.
To tell; to declare. [Obsolete] — Spenser
3.
To perform the act of reading; to peruse, or to go over and utter aloud, the words of a book or other like document.
So they read in the book of the law of God distinctly, and gave the sense. — Neh. viii. 8
4.
To study by reading; as, he read for the bar.
5.
To learn by reading.
I have read of an Eastern king who put a judge to death for an iniquitous sentence. — Swift
6.
To appear in writing or print; to be expressed by, or consist of, certain words or characters; as, the passage reads thus in the early manuscripts.
7.
To produce a certain effect when read; as, that sentence reads queerly.
Collocations (1)
To read between the lines , to infer something different from what is plainly indicated; to detect the real meaning as distinguished from the apparent meaning.

Read , noun

[Anglo-Saxon rad counsel, from radan to counsel. See Read, transitive verb]

1.
Saying; sentence; maxim; hence, word; advice; counsel. See Rede. [Obsolete]
2.
Reading. [Colloquial] — Hume
One newswoman here lets magazines for a penny a read. — Furnivall

Read (red) , imperfect and past participle

imp. & past participle of Read, transitive verb & i.

Read (red) , adjective

Instructed or knowing by reading; versed in books; learned.
A poet... well read in Longinus. — Addison