Listening
in sentence
1141 examples of Listening in a sentence
So far, I've only talked about what's happening in the listener's brain, in your brain, when you're
listening
to talks.
To look in the speaker's brain, we asked the speaker to go into the scanner, we scan his brain and then compare his brain responses to the brain responses of the listeners
listening
to the story.
Because, for example, now you're
listening
really hard and trying to understand what I'm saying.
And if one sentence is enough to make your brain similar to people that think like you and very different than people that think differently than you, think how this effect is going to be amplified in real life, when we are all
listening
to the exact same news item after being exposed day after day after day to different media channels, like Fox News or The New York Times, that give us very different perspectives on reality.
But maybe one way to do it is to go back to the more natural way of communication, which is a dialogue, in which it's not only me speaking to you now, but a more natural way of talking, in which I am speaking and I am listening, and together we are trying to come to a common ground and new ideas.
That means not only
listening
to sex workers when we speak but amplifying our voices.
And I'd be
listening.
And our conversation centered on
listening
more deeply to what those values might be.
That's me,
listening
to the Beatles' "White Album."
So imagine
listening
to a conversation and only understanding 50 percent of what is said.
I've had the opportunity over the last couple of days of
listening
in on some of your conversations and watching you interact with each other.
Listening
to this burst that you're seeing on the screen brought something to the ear beyond the obvious burst.
So
listening
to this brought something to the ear besides the obvious burst.
Listening
to this very gamma-ray burst brought us to the notion that the use of sound as an adjunctive visual display may also support sighted astronomers in the search for more information in the data.
John was part of the audience
listening
for the first time to the details of my study.
Being truly civil means doing the small things, like smiling and saying hello in the hallway,
listening
fully when someone's speaking to you.
I found that thanking people, sharing credit,
listening
attentively, humbly asking questions, acknowledging others and smiling has an impact.
I was
listening
to them talk and thinking that the best thing I could do was be invisible.
And I worry for us both if we continue down this road, me not listening, you feeling unheard, you shouting to get me to listen.
Thanks very much for
listening.
But in this way, we can begin to use social media as an active tool for social justice, as a tool to educate, to stimulate dialogues, to make those in positions of authority aware of an issue by
listening
to those directly affected by it.
What if it could be like a conversation, taking turns
listening
and speaking, just like we do in life?
Listening
to a sound with a lot less reverberation than the on-screen action is going to immediately signify to us that we're
listening
to a commentator, to an objective narrator that's not participating in the on-screen action.
On the completely other side, adding a lot of reverb to a voice is going to make us think that we're
listening
to a flashback, or perhaps that we're inside the head of a character or that we're
listening
to the voice of God.
Nuns in monasteries in Rome and Venice used to sing in rooms up in galleries close to the ceiling, creating the illusion that we're
listening
to angels up in the sky.
So thanks for
listening.
It took resilience and perseverance to not quit, but I learned something that I knew before on the one percent day, and that is that you can only be good when you are truly, authentically
listening
to your own voice and working in alignment with that.
But I'm so inspired when I see people who have a way that they do things, have a way that they think about the world, and they're courageous enough to be open to
listening
to what the experiences are of so many of us who want to live in world that's just and want to live in a world that's equitable.
But a reporting tool is only as useful as the audience that's
listening.
And for the rest of us, when will we start
listening
to our young people?
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