As usual, he's talking just to hear himself talk. :-)
She talks out loud when there is nobody on stage to hear her, so she is either talking out loud to herself or addressing the audience. This is called a soliloquy.
He was probably finished school around age 15, and we next hear about him at age eighteen, being a husband and father. We then hear about him becoming a father again and then nothing for about ten years.
Only if he says anything that could possibly, in any way imaginable, be wrong. Then he's wrong.
It depends on what he says. No, she wouldn't have to say it -- it's common knowledge that he is always wrong. It doesn't matter. The woman will tend to say he's wrong, even if he isn't. And he's used to hearing her tell him he's wrong a lot, so he's conditioned to her reaction whether she hears what he says or not. He avoids taking that kind of thing personally for the sake of the relationship. It's the wise thing to do, and he is sufficiently evolved to know this.
He didn't want to tell her of the horrible murder because she was a woman but ironically the killing was all her idea.
This is a play on the stereotype that men are often perceived as being in the wrong when communicating with women. In reality, whether a man is right or wrong in a conversation does not depend on the gender of the other person involved. Communication effectiveness comes from mutual understanding and respect, not from gender dynamics.
The answer entirely depends on whether or not the speaker in question spoke a factual or a nonfactual comment. Or if he spoke loudly enough for his voice to be carried to an object which would reverberate his sound-waves and they echoed so that the woman in question could hear what was being said. Assuming the woman is actually listening. Research shows the intersection of activities such that "Man Talks" and "Woman Listens" is too insignificant to be of concern.
because no one is around to hear it!
Yes, the tree fell regardless of whether someone heard it or not. The falling of the tree is a physical event that occurred regardless of an observer.
Cicadas and other buggies.
yes but you cant hear it i agree with this because the animals are still going to run away.
In a boreal forest you might hear goats, sheep, bears, and wolves. You also might hear loons, geese, ducks, and hawks.
If a tree falls in the forest, and no one is around to hear it, does it truly make a sound?
no it does not make a sound because the tree is all the way in the forest and your home you can not hear it or it depends where you live if you live in the forest yes if not no.
Yes. Furthermore, a tree falling in the forest makes a substantial noise, and if a man speaks with no woman present to hear him, he is still wrong.
Yes, the falling tree will generate sound waves whether or not there is anyone there to hear them. Sound is a vibration that travels through the air, and the falling tree will create these vibrations regardless of whether someone is there to perceive them.
The bear, for starters. ---- It depends on how loud it is This is the same as If a tree falls in the forest & there is no one around to hear it does it make a sound? Yes! also see the two answers above.