Hearer
81Heraclitus — Catherine Osborne No philosopher before Socrates can have had such a profound influence on so many generations of subsequent thinkers as Heraclitus. Nor can any thinker, probably in the whole history of philosophy, have inspired such a wide range …
82Hearing — (Roget s Thesaurus) >Sense of sound. < N PARAG:Hearing >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 hearing hearing &c. >V. Sgm: N 1 audition audition auscultation Sgm: N 1 eavesdropping eavesdropping Sgm: N 1 audibility audibility GRP: N …
832. THE HEIFER (al-Baqarah) — In the name of God, the Gracious, the Merciful. 1. Alif, Lam, Meem. 2. This is the Book in which there is no doubt, a guide for the righteous. 3. Those who believe in the unseen, and perform the prayers, and give from what We have provided for… …
84implication — implication, inference are often interchangeable, but they may be distinguished when they specifically refer to something that is hinted at but not explicitly stated. Implication applies to what is hinted, whether the writer or speaker is aware… …
85auditor — au•di•tor [[t]ˈɔ dɪ tər[/t]] n. 1) bus a person authorized to examine accounts and give a report 2) edu a student who attends a course to listen but not receive credit 3) a hearer; listener • Etymology: 1300–50; hearer …
86hear — [c]/hɪə / (say hear) verb (heard /hɜd / (say herd), hearing) –verb (t) 1. to perceive by the ear. 2. to listen to: to refuse to hear a person. 3. to learn by the ear or by being told; be informed of: to hear news. 4. to be among the audience at… …
87ἀκουστάς — ἀκουστά̱ς , ἀκουστής hearer masc acc pl ἀκουστά̱ς , ἀκουστής hearer masc nom sg (epic doric aeolic) ἀκουστά̱ς , ἀκουστός heard fem acc pl …
88ἀκροατάς — ἀκροᾱτά̱ς , ἀκροατής hearer masc acc pl ἀκροᾱτά̱ς , ἀκροατής hearer masc nom sg (epic doric aeolic) …
89foreign vocatives — Novels and plays written in English often introduce characters of other nationalities and give conversations in English that supposedly take place in other languages. A favourite way of indicating the latter is to throw in a few vocative… …
90you + nominal group — The commonest use of ‘you’ in vocative expressions is as an introductory word, followed by a nominal group. Such vocatives tend to be insulting, or reproachful, or mockingly so. At their simplest they are two word expressions such as ‘you… …