Well-read in a sentence as an adjective

The punks I've known are much more well-read and just as bright as the grad students I spend time with now.

The concept of a mouse moving the cursor on the screen was beyond her comprehension, yet otherwise she was a perfectly intelligent, well-read woman.

Obviously I didn't read the email, but the author seems well-read and reasonable, so I'm inclined to conjecture that whatever he sent wasn't outrageous.

The problem is that the fields in which he is an expert have failed to provide sufficiently better predictive power over the judgement of a well-read or experienced layman[1].

English literature students, for example, just leave with some long essays under their belts, they don't graduate as well-read authorities on different epochs of literature.

Early 20th century physicists were very well-read in philosophy, and their interpretations are accordingly sophisticated and rarely run into novice problems.

If you get your book published up by Random House, then the reader at the store can say, if absolutely nothing else, that a group of well-read professionals thought your book was good enough to warrant stamping with their brand and spending money polishing and marketing.

The following is based on conjecture, as I'm not old or well-read enough to be sure of this, but it seems to me that the original purpose of type systems got muddled up by the tremendous popularity, mostly in Windows systems, of "hungarian" variable naming style.

Well-read definitions

adjective

well informed or deeply versed through reading; "respect for a well-read man"; "well-read in medieval history"

adjective

highly educated; having extensive information or understanding; "knowing instructors"; "a knowledgeable critic"; "a knowledgeable audience"

See also: knowing knowledgeable learned lettered well-educated