Listener in a sentence as a noun

A million plays is roughly 62500 listener hours, which implies a content cost of $1250.

Since it means so little, listeners "fill in the blanks" and make up their own explanation for what it means.

By attempting to use force, you imply that the listener won't listen to reason, without having even tried.

I think part of what drives the complaint is that a song being on Spotify is much more valuable to the listener than it being on the radio.

As a semi-regular podcast listener who really likes TAL but feels like they have some hits and some misses, this one is definitely a hit.

This is not contradicted neither by size of their IPO nor by number of their listeners, because this is a marginal game, not summary.

They are an effective means of selling the speaker to listeners, each of whom believes that they understand what the speaker is saying and agrees with it.

Each sentence you form to an audience or a customer must be reframed from the point of view of the potential listener, and not from what you think you are saying.

Techie jargon is generally meant to enhance communication, while biz jargon is meant to baffle the listener with ********.

In a well-run standup, your audience is the whole team, because you're accountable to the team rather than any one person, and as a team member you're an active listener.

Heaping the blame/responsibility of understanding on the readier/listener.

It's clearly PR to extract 'higher' payments, even though Pandora already pays among the highest per-listener rates in the US across all mediums.

Jazz, like other abstract arts, is especially interesting because of how malleable it can be, with each listener bringing their own perspectives and opinions into how they perceive the work.

Increasing listeners also doesn't make it more profitable if they spend a lot of money on royalties - if they pay in royalties and associated costs more than additional listener brings in, more listeners means worse situation, not better.

Rephrased, the proper way to ask a favor of a public radio show is on a note attached to your listener pledge, not an online petition that has little to do with the making of good radio, a task i imagine consumes the majority of TAL's energy.

It is\n not transactional, an agreement between a listener or a\n spy or a peephole keeper and the person being spied on.\n\n If you accept this supposedly bilateral offer, to provide\n email service for you for free as long as it can all be \n read, then everybody who corresponds with you has been \n subjected to the bargain, which was supposedly bilateral\n in nature.

Listener definitions

noun

someone who listens attentively

See also: hearer auditor attender