Listening
in sentence
1141 examples of Listening in a sentence
So I began listening, in fact, thousands of hours of
listening
just to establish trust.
And this was a device that would sit in the middle of our home with a microphone on, constantly
listening.
I mean, there was no doubt that Amy and I and Salaam all had this love for this gospel, soul and blues and jazz that was evident
listening
to the musical arrangements.
Rives: I would be
listening
to music, and this would happen.
And while
listening
to music is wonderful, there's a special joy to making music that's all its own.
This is a globe, and here you're actually
listening
to other users of Ocarina blow into their iPhones to play something.
And with that, I want to say, this is computer music, and thank you for
listening.
When those two things get conflated, you're
listening
into the wind.
We speak not very well to people who simply aren't
listening
in an environment that's all about noise and bad acoustics.
What would the world be like if we were speaking powerfully to people who were
listening
consciously in environments which were actually fit for purpose?
I was looking at the news streams and
listening
to the press conferences of the government officials and the Tokyo Power Company, and hearing about this explosion at the nuclear reactors and this cloud of fallout that was headed towards our house which was only about 200 kilometers away.
We spend so much time
listening
to the things people are saying that we rarely pay attention to the things they don't.
A few minutes later, in asking Veronica some questions, and examining her and
listening
to her, I said, "Veronica, I think I know what you have.
And thanks for
listening
to what I had to say.
They are in this constant state of wonder, and I do firmly believe that we can keep
listening
like these seven-year-old children, even when growing up.
And so, gradually over these three days, you start off kind of trying to figure out, "Why am I
listening
to all this irrelevant stuff?"
Hany was into his second year in limbo when I went to visit him recently, and we conducted our entire conversation in English, which he confessed to me he learned from reading all of Dan Brown's novels and from
listening
to American rap.
"Yes, sir?" "Are you listening?"
He got up and gave a very eloquent speech, and at the end of the speech, there was a panel, and on the panel were these pharmaceutical executives and biochemists and clinicians and I'm sitting there and I'm
listening
to them and most of the content went straight over my head.
But I was watching these people, and I was
listening
to them, and they were saying, "I, I do this, I do that," and there was a real unfamiliarity between them.
I said, "But I do have to tell you that I'm watching your body language and I'm
listening
to what you're saying.
I had a chance to rule out a stroke in this chimpanzee and make sure that this gorilla didn't have a torn aorta, evaluate this macaw for a heart murmur, make sure that this California sea lion's paricardium wasn't inflamed, and in this picture, I'm
listening
to the heart of a lion after a lifesaving, collaborative procedure with veterinarians and physicians where we drained 700 cc's of fluid from the sac in which this lion's heart was contained.
I feel it myself when I'm
listening
to Mozart or looking at pictures of the Mars Rover on my MacBook.
I was on a long road trip this summer, and I was having a wonderful time
listening
to the amazing Isabel Wilkerson's "The Warmth of Other Suns."
What you're
listening
to is the sound of the brain of this monkey as it explores three different visually identical spheres in virtual space.
Could you learn to drive a car, for example, just by
listening
to someone telling you what to do, with no kinesthetic experience?
The idea is that
listening
to Mozart makes you smarter and improves your performance on IQ tests.
The people who preferred Mozart music to the stories got a bigger IQ boost from the Mozart than the stories, but the people who preferred the stories to the Mozart music got a bigger IQ boost from
listening
to the Stephen King stories than the Mozart music.
So the truth is that
listening
to something that you enjoy perks you up a bit and gives you a temporary IQ boost on a narrow range of tasks.
There's no suggestion that
listening
to Mozart, or indeed Stephen King stories, is going to make you any smarter in the long run.
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