The opposite of listener would be speaker.
The divine Tyger
both of them because the listener wanted the speaker to talk to him and the speaker would be blamedbecause he was talking.Hope this helped!:)
He is young.
Well, some people think that words, once they are spoken or written, are dead... that instead of having life and potential, as they do before they are used, their meaning is frozen now, and you can't pull anything new out of them. Emily Dickinson, in this poem, thinks that words don't live *until* they are expressed in some meaningful way... and that, instead of the words losing potential... she thinks that words, unused, are the ones that are dead... and that by using them in speech or in writing, that is what brings them to live and gives them meaning. Here is a link to the poem: http://www.bartleby.com/113/1089.html To me, in this poem, Dickinson defines the cultural and semantic polarities of language and communication... "A word is dead when it is said, some say" suggests that some believe that there is an internal, psychological, intellectual and cultural life to words. They believe that words have immortal lives with infinite meanings when unuttered, such as during meditation...an Eastern cultural point of view. Once uttered, some say, a word's infinite possible meanings are cut short...a word becoming "defined" or delimited by cultural parameters and the personal perspectives of the listener. This is one possible reason why Asian cultures tend to avoid verbal expression of emotions. There is the belief that a word cannot express all of a feeling, and words when said can suggest only some meanings, "killing off" others...so that the emotion and the word essentially die. On the other hand, Dickinson offers an alternative philosophy. "I say it just begins to live that day" presents a Western perspective on communication. Dickinson insists that the internal world of a word, the unuttered word's meaning, is limited by the cultural and intellectual perspective of the thinker. Only when spoken does a word come alive, its meaning brought to life by the listener, the listener's input, the listener's interaction with the word and the speaker.
The opposite of prose IS poetry.
listener
An antonym of a word is another word meaning the exact opposite of the first word. An antonym for the word announcer is listener.
listener = ascultător
ακροατής thats the translation for listener:)
The word listener when translated from English to Japanese is kikite or risuna.
An attentive listener can also be described as a good listener or an engaged listener.
male listener = שומע (shome'a) female listener = שומעת (shoma'at)
Yes, the word "listener" is a noun. It refers to someone who actively hears or pays attention to what is being said.
The word for listener in Swahili is: msikilizaji.The noun is from the verb kusikiliza, to listen, which is formed from the verb kusikia, to hear.
The word you are looking for is "attentive listener."
obedient, listener, respectful
what word is opposite of prudent