Nevermore.
Instead of saying "can I hear from you?", you can say, "Please respond."
So good to hear from you (English) -> Si bon de vous entendre (French)
He's being sarcastic ---------------------------- Or just normally/politely pleasant, don't read anything into it. It could mean he is really happy to hear from you! My interest says that to me all the time and he also says hope to hear from you soon. It's a good thing!
all of the above
C'est bon a parler avec vous.
The speaker is expressing surprise at the raven's ability to speak so clearly and coherently. The use of "ungainly fowl" suggests that the speaker finds it strange that such a seemingly ordinary bird can articulate words and communicate effectively.
They do not wish the soldiers to hear their discourse.
Kentucky Fried ChickenEl Pollo LocoChicken FarmerOrnithologistSee the related question if you are also interested in foul language.
I own guinea fowl but trust me, you DO NOT want to own any because they are noisy birds!SECOND ANSWERDON'T LISTEN!!!!!!!!!!!! I HAVE TWO GUINEA FOWL AND I LOOOOOOOOOVE THEM! even if they are a tad noisy i Have 3 guinea fowl that came home with a partridge pekin she can escape from pen early in morning and all you hear from 5.30 in the morning is back back back there noisy but since they matured i always no when there is someone coming in that they dont know to my cat going out into the yard to play with the hen family great birds dont need an alarm clock ha
One thought:The 'Sermon on the Mount' (The 'discourse on the mountain')was so named because this memorable and very powerful talk/discourse ('sermon') that Jesus gave was presented while sitting on a 'level place' in a mountainous area(Matthew 5:1+2) which provided good acoustics, so everyone could hear him well.
Well, she bewitched the King, didn't she? Why else would he hand over command of his armies to a teenage girl? And didn't she claim to hear voices telling her what to do? Plainly, her familiars. Nevertheless, Joan was condemned, in the end, not for witchcraft but for heresy. Which is to say, that she chose to obey her voices rather than the Church. Of this, she was plainly guilty; which is why, although her condemnation was rescinded soon after her death, her canonisation took another 500 years.
A voice spoke from heaven at His baptism (Matt. 3:17), the Transfiguration (Matt. 17:5), and during the discourse following His triumphal entry into Jerusalem (John 12:28).
Hmm...fowl language? OHH, you mean FOUL. Are you really an adult? Yoville doesn't know that. If there was an age-group option, kids would lie. And to be honest? It isn't just the kids who use profanities so often. And really? Yoville is a kids' game anyway. Don't go on public servers if you don't want to hear the (unfortunate) language of the general population... That's my advice.
To utter words; esp., to converse familiarly; to speak, as in familiar discourse, when two or more persons interchange thoughts., To confer; to reason; to consult., To prate; to speak impertinently., To speak freely; to use for conversing or communicating; as, to talk French., To deliver in talking; to speak; to utter; to make a subject of conversation; as, to talk nonsense; to talk politics., To consume or spend in talking; -- often followed by away; as, to talk away an evening., To cause to be or become by talking., The act of talking; especially, familiar converse; mutual discourse; that which is uttered, especially in familiar conversation, or the mutual converse of two or more., Report; rumor; as, to hear talk of war., Subject of discourse; as, his achievment is the talk of the town.
The future tense of hear is will hear.
hear - hear(s), hear(ing/s), hear(able), hear(er/s), hear(ken), hear(say), hear(se/s/d), hear(ten/s)
The present tense of the verb "hear" is "hear". For example, "I hear the music playing."