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ear
1[ eer ]
noun
- the organ of hearing and equilibrium in vertebrates, in humans consisting of an external ear that gathers sound vibrations, a middle ear in which the vibrations resonate against the tympanic membrane, and a fluid-filled internal ear that maintains balance and that conducts the tympanic vibrations to the auditory nerve, which transmits them as impulses to the brain.
- the external ear alone:
The hat completely covers his ears.
- the sense of hearing:
sounds that are pleasing to the ear.
- keen or sensitive perception of the differences of sound, especially sensitiveness to the quality and correctness of musical sounds:
an ear for music; a violinist with a good ear.
to gain a person's ear.
- any part that resembles or suggests an ear in position or form, as the handle of a teacup.
- Architecture. crossette.
- Journalism. a small box in either upper corner of a newspaper page, usually the front page or split page, containing the name of or a symbol for the edition, a weather bulletin, a slogan, or the like.
- Furniture.
- a decorative feature at the upper end of a leg.
- one of the decorative features at each end of a crest rail.
- ears, Slang. earphones.
ear
2[ eer ]
noun
- the part of a cereal plant, as corn, wheat, etc., that contains the flowers and hence the fruit, grains, or kernels.
verb (used without object)
- to form or put forth ears.
ear
3[ eer ]
verb (used with object)
- to plow; cultivate.
ear
1/ ɪə /
noun
- the part of a cereal plant, such as wheat or barley, that contains the seeds, grains, or kernels
verb
- intr (of cereal plants) to develop such parts
ear
2/ ɪə /
noun
- the organ of hearing and balance in higher vertebrates and of balance only in fishes. In man and other mammals it consists of three parts See external ear middle ear internal ear auralotic
- the outermost cartilaginous part of the ear (pinna) in mammals, esp man
- the sense of hearing
- sensitivity to musical sounds, poetic diction, etc
he has an ear for music
- attention, esp favourable attention; consideration; heed (esp in the phrases give ear to, lend an ear )
- an object resembling the external ear in shape or position, such as a handle on a jug
- Also called (esp Brit)earpiece a display box at the head of a newspaper page, esp the front page, for advertisements, etc
- all earsvery attentive; listening carefully
- by earwithout reading from written music
- chew someone's ear slang.to reprimand severely
- fall on deaf earsto be ignored or pass unnoticed
- have hard earsto be stubbornly disobedient
- a flea in one's ear informal.a sharp rebuke
- have the ear ofto be in a position to influence
he has the ear of the president
- in one ear and out the otherheard but unheeded
- keep one's ear to the ground or have one's ear to the groundto be or try to be well informed about current trends and opinions
- make a pig's ear of informal.to ruin disastrously
- one's ears are burningone is aware of being the topic of another's conversation
- out on one's ear informal.dismissed unceremoniously
- play by ear
- to act according to the demands of a situation rather than to a plan; improvise
- to perform a musical piece on an instrument without written music
- prick up one's earsto start to listen attentively; become interested
- set by the earsto cause disagreement or commotion
- a thick ear informal.a blow on the ear delivered as punishment, in anger, etc
- turn a deaf earto be deliberately unresponsive
- up to one's ears informal.deeply involved, as in work or debt
- wet behind the ears informal.inexperienced; naive; immature
ear
1/ îr /
- The seed-bearing spike of a cereal plant, such as corn or wheat.
ear
2/ îr /
- The vertebrate organ of hearing, which in mammals is usually composed of three parts: the outer ear, middle ear, and inner ear. The organs of balance are also located in the ear.
- An invertebrate organ analogous to the vertebrate ear.
ear
- The organ of hearing, which also plays a role in maintaining balance. It is divided into the outer ear (from the outside to the eardrum ), the middle ear , and the inner ear .
Derived Forms
- ˈearless, adjective
- ˈearˌlike, adjective
Other Words From
- ear·less adjective
- ear·like adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of ear1
Origin of ear2
Origin of ear3
Word History and Origins
Origin of ear1
Origin of ear2
Idioms and Phrases
- be all ears, Informal. to give all one's attention; listen:
We were all ears as the scandal was revealed.
- bend an ear, to listen attentively:
to bend an ear to a request for aid.
- bend someone's ear, Informal. to talk to someone uninterruptedly and often so as to induce boredom:
He'll bend your ear for hours if given the chance.
- by ear, without reference to written or printed music:
to play the piano by ear.
- fall on deaf ears, to be disregarded; pass unheeded:
Their pleas for mercy fell on deaf ears.
- give ear, to pay attention; listen carefully. Also lend an ear.
- go in one ear and out the other, to be heard but ignored; be put out of mind:
My repeated warnings to her went in one ear and out the other.
- have one's ears on, Slang. to be listening to a CB radio, police radio, walkie-talkie, etc.
- have / keep one's ear to the ground, to keep well-informed about current trends; be shrewd or astute:
Because she had her ear to the ground, she made a large fortune in stock speculation.
- pin someone's ears back, Slang. to give a person a sound beating; defeat a person utterly:
If he doesn't behave himself, I'll pin his ears back.
- set by the ears, to cause to dispute or quarrel:
He's a troublemaker who keeps trying to set the two other children by the ears.
- set on one's ear / ears, to excite or stir up; shock; amaze:
The presence of the movie star set the whole town on its ear.
- turn a deaf ear to, to refuse to listen to or consider (a request, petition, etc.):
He turns a deaf ear to requests for loans.
- up to one's ears, deeply involved or occupied to full capacity:
We are up to our ears in work.
- wet behind the ears. wet ( def 19 ).
More idioms and phrases containing ear
- all ears
- believe one's ears
- bend someone's ear
- can't make a silk purse out of sow's ear
- coming out of one's ears
- cute as a button (bug's ear)
- fall on deaf ears
- flea in one's ear
- have someone's ear
- in one ear and out the other
- lend one's ear
- music to one's ears
- out on one's ear
- pin someone's ears back
- play by ear
- prick up one's ears
- put a bug in someone's ear
- turn a deaf ear
- up to one's ears
- walls have ears
- wet behind the ears
Example Sentences
Catherine praises those who care for others in need: "Gentle words or a receptive ear, an arm around an exhausted shoulder, or silently being by someone’s side."
If you think your child may have swallowed a button battery or stuck one inside their nose or ear, go to the nearest emergency department right away.
Symptoms of temporomandibular joint disorder include pain around the jaw, ear and temple, a headache around the temples and difficulty opening one's mouth fully, according to the NHS website.
To my ears, Jolie sounds fantastic, the kind of voice that would knock ’em dead on karaoke night.
The cast of guests — hailing from Compton to Baldwin Park and beyond — proves his ear is still close to the ground.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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