Peter's mother suggested that he should save his pocket money up for a bicycle, but her advice went in one ear and out of the other and he spent it all on sweets.
Here's another one: Ryan's mother suggested that he should save his pocket money up for a bicycle, but her advice went in one ear and out the other and he spent it all on pokemon cards.
Whenever I try to give him advice, it's like talking to a brick wall - it goes in one ear and out the other.
The sentence "What are you wearing on your ear?" is grammatically correct. It is asking someone to describe what they have on their ear.
Excuse me, but you just shouted your answer in my ear.
The sentence is grammatically correct, but it may raise ethical concerns regarding piercing a baby's ear without their consent.
The word "ear" is only a verb in botany, where it means forming the edible part of a grain. Example: The farmer was concerned when his barley did not ear late in the season.
The inner ear is responsible for helping us maintain balance and for hearing sound.
If you listen to gossip, it will poison your ear about Joe.
It can mean either you didn't pay enough attention, or you just didn't understand.
It means to get your full attention and listen to what he/she is going to say
The LITERAL meaning would be a flea in your ear! But "a flea in your ear" is an idiom, a saying, and it is not normally used literally.
If you have your ear to the ground, then you are listening to gossip or rumors, and you know all of the latest "dirt."
improvise, wing it, play it by ear
Shakespeare used this in his play Julius Caesar.
It means someone is telling you a small hint to remind you of something
I represent the ear cannel my friend pinna is alway shaking me around but all I can do is pass it on. (I don't know how to write the ear cannel I think it's right that way)
Ear is a noun that can mean the part of the body with which people and animals hear, the sense of hearing, or the part of a grain plant where the seeds grow. Here are some sample sentences."She had seven piercings in her ear.""The comedian had a good ear for voices.""We spent hours over the weekend shucking the ears of corn."
Basically, it means that you're hearing what the other person is saying, but you're not actually listening and taking in what they're saying to you. This is the real answer: Not listening to what is being said. Not attentive.
It pretty much means "don't lie to me nor insult my intelligence." The idiom may substitute other body parts such as ear.