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I hear vs. I am hearing


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How to use the modal verbs? | Hear vs. listen?
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I hear vs. I am hearing #1 (permalink) Thu Nov 04, 2004 13:37 pm   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

Test No. incompl/elem-4 "Listen/Hear", question 4

I ......... what you are saying but that still doesn't make me want to change my mind one little bit.

(a) listen
(b) hear
(c) am listing
(d) am hearing

Test No. incompl/elem-4 "Listen/Hear", answer 4

I hear what you are saying but that still doesn't make me want to change my mind one little bit.

Correct answer: (b) hear

Your answer was: incorrect
I am hearing what you are saying but that still doesn't make me want to change my mind one little bit.
_________________________

what should it not be 'am hearing'?

Larissa Tue
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Hear #2 (permalink) Thu Nov 04, 2004 21:35 pm   Hear
 

Not usually used in continuous form
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I hear vs. I am hearing #3 (permalink) Wed Aug 24, 2005 17:20 pm   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

Hi Alan,

why you can use "listen" here?

You are listening what the other is telling to you, but what he says doesn't change your mind... so,

you are paying attention, not only hearing a voice, aren't you?

thanks!
ELS learner
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Listen/hear #4 (permalink) Wed Aug 24, 2005 18:03 pm   Listen/hear
 

Hi,

Yes, you can say either I am listening or I listen but when I wrote this sentence, I did not include the preposition to and the only word that fits in this particular sentence is hear. If you use listen with an object, you have to include to as in: listen to music/listen to a speech/listen to what someone says and so on.

Hope this helps

Alan
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I hear vs. I am hearing #5 (permalink) Wed Aug 24, 2005 21:09 pm   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

Thanks for your answer!

So, when do you use "listen" without "to"?

Smile

PD: that was a round-about one, wasn't it? Very HappyVery Happy
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Listen #6 (permalink) Wed Aug 24, 2005 21:27 pm   Listen
 

You use it without to when there is no object
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I hear vs. I am hearing #7 (permalink) Fri Oct 05, 2007 22:31 pm   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

Hi, Surangwood

Welcome to our forum !
So, what is your question?
Lost_Soul
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I hear vs. I am hearing #8 (permalink) Fri Oct 05, 2007 22:43 pm   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

what should it not be 'am hearing' ?
Surangwood
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I hear vs. I am hearing #9 (permalink) Thu Oct 16, 2008 8:28 am   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

Hi, Alan! It sound a little bit odd to me. It it better to say; I heard what you are saying, but that still doesn't make me want to change my mind one little bit. Please correct me, if I'm wrong.
Jerryjay75
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I hear vs. I am hearing #10 (permalink) Thu Oct 16, 2008 11:23 am   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

Hi,

If you used 'heard', you would have a strange mixture of tenses. You would have to make them both past -I heard what you were saying.

Alan
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I hear vs. I am hearing #11 (permalink) Thu Oct 16, 2008 11:53 am   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

Hi! Alan, I agree with you. Thanks a lot!
Jerryjay75
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I hear vs. I am hearing #12 (permalink) Wed Jan 21, 2009 21:27 pm   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

Hi Alan I am very much confuse with listen and hear.Would you please make me clear.
Rashmi Shrestha
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Listen/hear #13 (permalink) Tue Feb 17, 2009 7:52 am   Listen/hear
 

Hi Alan,
I have a doubt,according to your statement "listen to" must be used with a object and I would like to know which is the object in the below sentence.
"I listen to what you are saying but that still doesn't make me want to change my mind one little bit."
Naive_User
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Listen/hear #14 (permalink) Tue Feb 17, 2009 7:54 am   Listen/hear
 

Alan wrote:
Hi,

Yes, you can say either I am listening or I listen but when I wrote this sentence, I did not include the preposition to and the only word that fits in this particular sentence is hear. If you use listen with an object, you have to include to as in: listen to music/listen to a speech/listen to what someone says and so on.

Hope this helps

Alan

Hi Alan,
I have a doubt,according to your statement "listen to" must be used with a object and I would like to know which is the object in the below sentence.
"I listen to what you are saying but that still doesn't make me want to change my mind one little bit."
Naive_User
New Member


Joined: 03 Feb 2009
Posts: 5

I hear vs. I am hearing #15 (permalink) Fri Feb 20, 2009 15:02 pm   I hear vs. I am hearing
 

Dear Sir
I hear what you are saying but that still doesn't make me want to change my mind one little bit.

I am hearing what you are saying but that still doesn't make me want to change my mind one little bit.

please give me differance of between two

regards
sajjad paha
Sajjad Pasha
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Joined: 31 Jan 2009
Posts: 10

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How to use the modal verbs? | Hear vs. listen?
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