Hearken in a sentence as a verb

I hearken it to the yeti. The system that worked best for sleep schedules for us was splitting duties.

Many of them hearken back to those days. The Linux DEs I tend to gravitate to are the ones that are most like classic Windows UI

Yes, it does hearken back to the AngelFire/Geocities days. It feels like a calling back to the time of some of the web's first innovations.

Programmers, on the other hand, hearken back to a time where Americans still built things and were very good at it. There's a good reason that the tech.

Now, in this thread, you hearken to "traditional families". You speak of a country that has "tax deductions".

It's interesting how game play hasn't changed all that much, and how many newish games hearken right back to this era and genre.

I'm still a teen, but I like to hearken to older times. I voluntarily chose not to join any social media, because I can see how commercialized it is.

Besides why do you hearken back to ancient history? Haven't your latest false flags and Novichok poisonings had the effect you wanted?

Yes you could train a mature person to think like a college kid, and maybe they could even hearken back to their college days for reference, but the times they are a-changin' and what's been considered cool for the past decade won't be next decade. Thus my point was: will Zuck be able to keep up with what's cool as he gets old and out of touch?

I hearken back to a snippet from a recent article: > 2014: We must adopt microservices to solve all the problems with monoliths > 2016: We must adopt Docker to solve all the problems with Microservices > 2018: We must adopt Kubernetes to solve all the problems with Docker What's next?" We must adopt Rancher to solve all the problems with K8s"?

Ignoring that, I still hearken back to the old PHP docs, where every function or method had its own page, at its own user-friendly URL, and everything was predictably where it was expected to be.

The reasons hearken back to the creation of the Federal government. The individual states that had to cede their own power for a federal government refused to join the union unless the Senate was created, with equal representation for all member states, regardless of population.

I continue to find it shocking that companies that pride themselves on making data-driven decisions have in place hiring matrices that hearken back to another time when attitudes--and crimes--were very different. Most HR professionals have no idea why existing parameters are what they are.

Alright so digging a bit: At common law, eavesdroppers, or such as listen under walls or windows, or the eaves of a house, to hearken after discourse, and thereupon to frame slanderous and mischievous tales, are a common nuisance and presentable at the court-leet; or are indictable at the sessions, and punishable by fine and finding of sureties for [their] good behavior. [1] Very Early Eavesdropping law.

Hearken definitions

verb

listen; used mostly in the imperative

See also: hark harken