where people or animals hear from
They produce sounds deliberately by using structures that vibrate as air is passed through them. Transmission is a natural physical process - sounds travel though air, liquids and solids. They receive sounds when the transmitted sound reaches them and is channeled into body structures where sensory fibers are caused to vibrate.
That is the correct form "receive", which follows the general rule "I before E except after C." And sometimes, when it sounds like "A", as in neighbor and weigh.
That sounds like a glitch in the system of your mobile phone provider.
Depends on what state you are in, but that sounds awfully high. You also should receive a notice in the mail to that effect.
No, speaking is a form of communication that involves using the sense of hearing and the ability to produce sounds, but it is not a sense in the traditional sense of the word. It relies on the senses of hearing and touch to receive feedback on the sounds produced.
NO! "if it sounds to good to be true, it usually is." You will never receive promised deals or merchandise. SCAM ALERT
You don't. It sounds like a scam. If you do send the 20, you'll never see the check. Forget it.
The correct sentence is " When you receive the invitation tonight only then will we go together. sounds and looks grammatically alright.
Sounds like the alert system is silenced - either that, or the network is not sending notifications
A transitive verb is an action verb that has an object that receives the action. In this case, the object CD player does not receive the action sounds, so the verb is intransitive.
If you have everything on the client side correct then it is not a client issue and you should contact RoadRunner/Time Warner about not being able to receive mail. It sounds like a configuration problem on there end.
Not usually. It sounds like the insurance company was a victim of fraud.