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Перевод: listener speek listener


[существительное]
слушатель ; радиослушатель


Тезаурус:

  1. This latter piece was very much a response to Roy Hattersley's article, "Let's Pretend Politics" ( The Listener , 23 June 1988) which had totally denounced the programme's politics as "fantasy as distinct from political thought".
  2. Likes a Real Good Listener
  3. At the distant end, the conversion from electrical signals to sound is carried out by the earpiece and the listener receives the information.
  4. One of the satisfying aspects of a high quality bass sound is that the listener can hear and separate the constituents of the overall tone (a characteristic of top-drawer active EQ systems, which when boosting/cutting your required frequency band manage not to compromise the sound's other components).
  5. Ramsey was asked later, were you getting unintelligible, or was it only that the bishop was a bad listener to Holy Week addresses?
  6. That Bob Mould six-string assault is one which must have encouraged more than one listener to pick up a guitar.
  7. To get the intended effect the listener must either wear headphones or sit between a pair of loudspeakers positioned like large headphones.
  8. The result is that the piece seems to become more polyphonic as the listener can more easily hear the lines.
  9. Had she for instance dictated that the partner should offer resistance this would have been a relatively crude way of "tightening" the structure compared with instructing the listener to be in a "counsellor" role.
  10. It requires a talker and a listener.
  11. Now this not only affects the psychological structure for the listener, it more pertinently affects the dynamics of the interaction.
  12. Sometimes, too, you have to scratch ear to make sure you really did just hear what you thought you had, for although spotting-the-influence occasionally seems to tempt the listener, there is some highly individual writing here, and the prodigality of the invention is startling: the music simply poured out of her, sometimes with a batty, Ancient-Mariner intensity that buttonholes the listener willy-nilly, not stopping to form its garrulousness into coherent shapes.
  13. Sir Ian Gilmour, sacked from the Cabinet in September 1981, was on both main television news bulletins on 10 January, telling viewers that being a good listener was not one of Mrs Thatcher's virtues, and that there had been "a downgrading of Cabinet government"; Cabinet meetings were something to be got through, not the place where views were to be aired and decisions reached.

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