View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Hearer.

Hearer

Hearer | Hearing | Hear | Hearings | Hears | Hearers

Hearer meaning

One who hears. | A person who regularly attends sermons; a devout listener.

Example sentences (16)

In documenting the life and times of a towering personality, exciting experiences are selected, which present emotional and spiritual values, to interpret the tale as it is rehearsed in imagination or told to an admiring reader, listener or hearer.

God's themes are music to the hearer.

Therefore, the reading of this story is accomplished by the patient student and not the momentary hearer.

A hearer can only receive specific auditory information at the time it is spoken.

As these heads usually suggest prejudicial associations to some hearer or other, the life of philosophy largely consists of resentments at the classing, and complaints of being misunderstood.

Augustine of Hippo, Against Two Letters of the Pelagians 1.31–32 Augustine had served as a "Hearer" for the Manichaeans for about nine years, Brown, Peter.

Conze (1993): 26 Hearing a teaching (transmission) readies the hearer for realization based on it.

Each audiencia had an oidores (Spanish: hearer, a judge).

Each audiencia had oidores (a hearer, a judge).

He was mindful of his arrangement, he used clauses to create patterns that would make seemingly complex sentences easy for the hearer to follow.

It also creates a bond between the teller and the hearer, as they share information of mutual interest and spend time together.

It also helps the hearer learn about another individual’s behavior and helps them have a more effective approach to their relationship.

Names are learned by connecting an idea with a sound, so that speaker and hearer have the same idea when the same word is used.

Searle's solution is that the hearer can figure out what the indirect speech act is meant to be, and he gives several hints as to how this might happen.

Some simple queries are formed simply by mentioning the topic with an interrogative intonation to call for the hearer's attention: Kore wa?

When exposed to linguistic data, the brain of a hearer-speaker then proceeds to associate sound and meaning, and the rules of grammar that we observe are in fact only the consequences, or side effects, of the way that language works.