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A Writer's Dictionary:

fall on deaf ears Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with F » fairing ... falling-off » fall on deaf ears


ear1
noun
    1. The sense organ, usually one of a pair situated on each side of the head, that is concerned with hearing and the maintenance of balance in vertebrates.
    2. The external part of the ear.
    3. The sense or power of hearing.
      Thesaurus: appreciation, regard, discrimination, sensitivity, taste.
    4. The ability to hear and appreciate the difference between sounds.
      Example: an ear for music
    5. Anything like an ear in shape or position.
    6. formal or literary
      Attention; the act of listening.
      Example: give ear to me
Derivative: eared
adj
    Note: usually in compounds
Derivative: earless
adj
    Idiom: be all ears
      colloq
      To listen attentively or with great interest.
    Idiom: fall on deaf ears
      Said of a remark, etc: to be ignored.
    Idiom: give someone a thick ear
      To slap them on their ear, especially as a punishment.
    Idiom: have one's ear to the ground (keep one's ear to the ground)
      To keep oneself well informed about what is happening around one.
    Idiom: have someone's ear
      To have them willing to listen or pay attention.
    Idiom: in one ear and out the other (in at one ear and out at the other)
      colloq
      Listened to but immediately disregarded.
    Idiom: lend an ear to someone or something
      To listen.
        Thesaurus: listen, give attention, heed, take notice.
    Idiom: make someone's ears burn
      To talk, especially unpleasantly, about them in their absence.
    Idiom: out on one's ear
      colloq
      Dismissed swiftly and without politeness.
    Idiom: pin back one's ears
      colloq
      To listen attentively.
    Idiom: play by ear (play something by ear)
      To play (music) without the help of printed music.
    Idiom: play it by ear
      colloq
      To act without a fixed plan, according to the situation that arises.
        Thesaurus: improvise, concoct, ad-lib.
    Idiom: turn a deaf ear to someone or something
      To refuse to listen.
    Idiom: up to one's ears in something
      colloq
      Deeply involved in it or occupied with it.
    Etymology: Anglo-Saxon eare.



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