Listen
in sentence
1759 examples of Listen in a sentence
Scared and mortified, I listen,
listen
as I prattle on about the flotsam and jetsam of the day;
listen
as I confess my love for the president, and, of course, my heartbreak;
listen
to my sometimes catty, sometimes churlish, sometimes silly self being cruel, unforgiving, uncouth; listen, deeply, deeply ashamed, to the worst version of myself, a self I don't even recognize.
Just like to hear is not the same as to listen, to take pictures is not the same as to see, and by seeing, we really mean understanding.
You sit across from, say, your grandfather for close to an hour and you
listen
and you talk.
I've learned about the poetry and the wisdom and the grace that can be found in the words of people all around us when we simply take the time to listen, like this interview between a betting clerk in Brooklyn named Danny Perasa who brought his wife Annie to StoryCorps to talk about his love for her.
Together, we can create an archive of the wisdom of humanity, and maybe in doing so, we'll learn to
listen
a little more and shout a little less.
Just
listen
to the sound for a moment.
Now,
listen
to what happens to that same exact sound when I move the panel.
Anyone here ever
listen
to what their mom told them to do?
We
listen
every day, and we hope that between now and somewhere in April, the lander will wake up again.
Normal things about being a kid and realizing that sometimes, it was best to
listen
to my parents even when I didn't exactly understand why.
They're going to go down across your corpus callosum, down onto your spinal cord to your lower motor neuron out to your muscles here, and that electrical discharge is going to be picked up by these electrodes right here and we're going to be able to
listen
to exactly what your brain is going to be doing.
So here's an experiment we did where we filmed a bag of candy while a nearby loudspeaker played the same "Mary Had a Little Lamb" music from before, but this time, we used just a regular store-bought camera, and so in a second, I'll play for you the sound that we recovered, and it's going to sound distorted this time, but
listen
and see if you can still recognize the music.
And so I want to take a step back and think about how that might change the ways that we use video, because we usually use video to look at things, and I've just shown you how we can use it to
listen
to things.
Ah, listen, dear heart.
You would
listen
in the neighborhoods on any given night, and to the untrained ear, it sounded like fireworks, but it was gunfire.
We decided to
listen
and not preach.
So much so, that I couldn't even talk to anyone else in the car and I couldn't even
listen
to music.
And then, you could talk to your friends again and
listen
to music.
We hold monthly town hall meetings to
listen
to their concerns, to find out what is on their minds.
No, but see, listen, you find me somebody who don't hate some part of their job.
In a way that reminds us, as we listen, that we're not alone in darkness.
When I drive to work, I
listen
to thuggish rap at a very loud volume.
If I
listen
to degrading music, I am creating a demand for which artists are more than happy to contribute a limitless supply.
Capt A:
Listen
... saving that kid is all that matters.
One way is to
listen
closely.
And if we truly
listen
to one another, we will hear things that demand that we shift our own perceptions.
And I had a high school science teacher who would say to the class, "The girls don't have to
listen
to this." Encouraging, yes.
But we have a government that doesn't want to listen, that doesn't have people at the highest levels that understand this.
Let's grasp this opportunity to let go of a tired, faulty narrative and
listen
and look for true stories, more beautifully complex stories, about who marginalized people and families and communities are.
Listen
to Reverend King's "Letter from Birmingham Jail."
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