Low and middle frequencies between 200 and 1000 Hz would be easiest on the ear I would imagine.
Frequencies around 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz are commonly used for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and other wireless communication technologies in English-speaking countries. AM and FM radio frequencies are also widely available for listening to English language broadcasts.
The African Luhya term for the English word 'listen' is "recheresia".
escucho means "I listen." (From the Spanish verb escuchar).
"Escuchar" in English means "to listen."
"Ecoutez" means "listen" in English. It is a command form of the verb "écouter," which means "to listen."
spanish is easy to learn because it has thousands of cognates and easier sentence structures then English.
A computer cannot do that. Buy a radio that receives these frequencies.
Very Easy. If you have a free time. You could find a book about English or research it on the Internet or even listen to your English teacher.
Radar detectors don't "use" any frequencies. However they listen to certain frequencies known as bands(K, Ka, X, Ku). These bands are the frequencies allocated to radar guns to operate on.
redio merurchi
Écoutez ! means 'listen !' in French.écoutez ! - listen !(imperative)Écoutez is 'Listen!' in English.
The African Luhya term for the English 'listen' is Wulira.
The African Luhya term for the English word 'listen' is "recheresia".
escucho means "I listen." (From the Spanish verb escuchar).
The Tomatis method involves the client using special headphones with bone and air conduction to listen to electronically recorded music frequencies. These are believed to open the brain to greater frequencies of sound.
"Escuchar" in English means "to listen."
SETI listens to frequencies between 1420 (the Hydrogen molecule) and 1662 (the hydroxyl molecule). This is to say that an intelligent civilization would recognize these frequencies and would probably be monitoring them a well. The cosmos is full of these frequencies and a slight deviation in the regular pulsing of these frequencies would be noticed by anyone who is scanning the skies. Hope this helps. Sam Farina III
Probably you don't study or u just don't listen in class. I had the problem in Kindergarden-3rd grade. The subject was English. So if u have this problem, try to listen in class more of fin and the lesson might be fun. Who knows?