Totally deaf; unable to hear anything.
Sinónimos
Examples for "unhearing"
Examples for "unhearing"
1Under his passionate words Arithelli sat like a being entranced, unseeing, unhearing.
2Weak, soft, slow and stupid, unseeing, unhearing and unaware, helpless, hopeless, and harried.
3The old man mumbled a reply; David leaned forward, unhearing.
4Even to this Prescott listened only with unhearing ears--atfirst.
5The two younger daughters kneeled unhearing, stiffened and impervious.
1I have a very good friend who has been profoundly deaf since birth.
2A control group of eight gerbils that received no treatment remained profoundly deaf.
3Hopefully, it will be one best appreciated by the profoundly deaf.
4I have a friend in town, tech writer, and profoundly deaf.
5He is profoundly deaf and wears hearing aids in each ear.
1Still she rocked back and forth, apparently as deaf as a post.
2She's as true as steel and as deaf as a post.
3The Marshal is as deaf as a post from the roar of cannon.
4The cook was deaf as a post and would never hear.
5He was deaf as a post and couldn't tell how loud they were.
1It won't wash. His honor'll be stone-deaf when ye tell him that.
2An old aunt left her the money because she was stone-deaf.
3Madness, stone-blind, stone-deaf-thatuttered no cry, and poured out no tears.
4Suppose you were stone-deaf, there would be no such thing as sound to you.
5She would, every few minutes, sink into a reverie, and appear to be stone-deaf.
6As I was stone-deaf in the right ear I always slept on the left side.
7To the one, she played ravishing strains, having first taken the precaution to make him stone-deaf.
8She was stone-deaf, and in the manner of deaf people always shouted what she had to say.
9It affected me as if a stone-deaf person had suddenly turned and joined in a whispered conversation.
10Miss Torsen was stone-deaf to his songs.
11The habit betrayed me very badly once with a woman called Mrs Blennerhasset who was stone-deaf and a lip-reader.
12I believed him stone-deaf till, on roaring with all the power of my lungs, he answered "Yes."
13For a moth who's stone-deaf
14Suppose all the accessories were away, could not one swear that the man was stone-deaf, beyond the reach of trumpet?
15The feeble-minded faun (the stone-deaf man) led the way to Mr. Pike's assistance, followed by Tony, the suicidal Greek.
16Mrs. Munroe proved to be a nice, motherly sort of a person, who, as it need hardly be said, was stone-deaf.