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Перевод: listener
[существительное] слушатель ; радиослушатель
Тезаурус:
- 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".
- Likes a Real Good Listener
- At the distant end, the conversion from electrical signals to sound is carried out by the earpiece and the listener receives the information.
- 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).
- Ramsey was asked later, were you getting unintelligible, or was it only that the bishop was a bad listener to Holy Week addresses?
- That Bob Mould six-string assault is one which must have encouraged more than one listener to pick up a guitar.
- To get the intended effect the listener must either wear headphones or sit between a pair of loudspeakers positioned like large headphones.
- The result is that the piece seems to become more polyphonic as the listener can more easily hear the lines.
- 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.
- It requires a talker and a listener.
- Now this not only affects the psychological structure for the listener, it more pertinently affects the dynamics of the interaction.
- 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.
- 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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