Id | in_the_loop_443 |
---|---|
Idiom | LEND/GIVE (SOMEONE) AN/(ONE’S) EAR |
Definition | to listen to someone |
Examples |
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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 |
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