Apedia

Ear Listen Lend Wanted In The Loop 443 Lend/Give An/(One’s Boss

Id in_the_loop_443
Idiom LEND/GIVE (SOMEONE) AN/(ONE’S) EAR
Definition to listen to someone
Examples
  1. The boss walked into the coffee room where we were chatting and asked us to lend him an ear. He wanted us to listen to what he had to say.
  2. All the children pulled on the teacher’s skirt, begging to hear the news. She finally told them that if they gave her an ear, she would tell them what they wanted to hear.
Extra Info

Dating from at least the 1600s, this phrase has consistently meant to listen to or ask someone to listen. It became especially popular after William Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar, in which Mark Antony says to a noisy crowd, ‘Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears’ in order to get them to quiet down and listen.

Category Conversation

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Sleeping dogs lie situation i’m bring in_the_loop_444 trouble

Previous card: Leave situation make i in_the_loop_442 accept avoid improve

Up to card list: In the Loop