'What do your ears enable you to do?' could be a question with the answer 'hear'.
Rhyme :"I hear you: hear you, hear me- we two- you, me talk on this page. alliteration: "I hear you: hear you, hear me" assonance: "I like a pipe for a Christmas present Or records-Bessie, Bop, or Bach" imagery: "The steps from the hill lead down into Harlem through a park"
I am not sure what is good because apparently i did not hear the joke for today.
As usual, he's talking just to hear himself talk. :-)
Want to hear a dirty joke? A pig fell in the mud!Wanna hear another one? A boy fell in the mud. Wanna hear a clean joke? He took a bath with bubbles. Wanna hear a dirty joke? Bubbles was the girl next door.
Depending on several factors, an aside or a soliloquy. Typically, an aside is a short comment made directly to the audience. Think of saying something under one's breath. A soliloquy is the character's train of thought spoken aloud for the audience to hear, but inaudible to other characters. So, based on the word 'remark' in your question, aside is probably the term you want.
What, I couldn't hear you. you can hear it in your head when you read it in your head
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.
first find someone who is willing to listen to your question. tell them you have a question, walk away from that person where they cant hear you, cover your ears, so you cant hear yourself, and ask that question out loud!
Internet?
Did not hear question, answer was a French woman.
A common naive question in interviews is "What are your weaknesses?"
Huh? I can't hear you. What was the question?
Rephrase the question pleaseVan Stevensvstevens90@gmail.com
The answer is a question: Did you hear about... The famous rodeo rider who would do anything for a horse?
i pose a question back at you, can fish hear>?
No course mentioned in your question, so nobody can tell.
Can I is hear question in grammar good?