LITERALLY it means hand me your ears for awhile and I will give them back later.
"Lend me your ears" figuratively means asking for someone's attention or their willingness to listen to what you have to say. It is a way of requesting that someone focus on and consider the information or message being presented.
they lend ------------------------------- The answer above is wrong. Not necessarily "lend". Prestan can also mean provide. Though "lend" and "provide" can mean the same, they have a different meaning. Also, by the word "provide" you can say, "Prestan Atencion." Prestan, in this sentence means provide. But providing attention sounds a tad weird. Therefore, "Pretsan Atencion" can mean "Pay Attention". Really, Prestan is more of a "provide" than a "lend". Therefore, the answer above is incomplete and inaccurate. -Sang Joon Park
It means: ears
Tagalog word namayagpag literally mean: reign
"Oreja" means "ear" in Spanish.
LITERALLY it means hand me your ears for awhile and I will give them back later.
The ISBN of Lend Me Your Ears is 0007173342.
Lend Me Your Ears was created on 2004-06-07.
Lend Me Your Ears - album - was created on 1990-07-16.
"Lend me your ears" figuratively means asking for someone's attention or their willingness to listen to what you have to say. It is a way of requesting that someone focus on and consider the information or message being presented.
yes
The phrase "lend me your ears" is a metaphorical way of saying, listen to what I am saying. Or in an older version, it could be rendered as hear ye, hear ye.
Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears The first line of a famous and often-quoted speech by Mark Antony in the play Julius Caesar
Ears. As in "Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears." Elizabethan English is modern English--most words are the same now as they were then.
Literally: To work someone through their ears.
Philip Wood has written: 'Lend me your ears'
Friends, Romans, Countrymen lend me your ears.