hugo
Darn Right She did!
the author shows that walnut sees because when his eyes are covered he can hear the noises and turn them into imagination that actually are happening
It was chord less.I was on one of the math papers in sixth grade.It's a super corny joke!
It's a line from a Yeats poem called "The Second Coming." But, you may be looking for something else.
'What do your ears enable you to do?' could be a question with the answer 'hear'.
Darn Right She did!
In question form: Did I hear the phone ring?? ( as to question yourself) / Did you hear the phone ring? In statement form: I didn't hear the phone ring.
"Very interesting. Tell me more about the book 'Do Hear a Phone?'"
The correct sentence is "I didn't hear the phone ring." In this context, "ring" is the correct form to use because it is referring to the action of the phone making a sound (ringing), not the phone itself as an object.
Yes you can hear it. I was on a phone with someone that got hit in a hit and run from the rear and could hear a boom sound.===========================You would hear it UNLESS the cell-phone was the point of first impact,which is very unlikely.
Reception on a phone means how clear the call is. It means how well you can hear the other person and how well they can hear you.
When you hear a phone number and write it down, your brain uses short term memory.
The mute button on a cell phone simply means that when you press that button, you can hear the person you are talking to but they cannot hear you.
i hear that it is a good phone, but the battery is very bad.
Both correct. It depends on what you're describing. "I didn't ... " means you're describing the fact that you, yourself, did not hear the phone ring. "You didn't ..." means you're describing to another person the fact that the other person didn't hear it ring.
Phone Booth
They can