English
WOTD – 24 December 2008
Etymology
From Middle English listenen, listnen, alteration (due to Middle English listen (“to listen, give heed to”)) of Old English hlysnan (“to listen”), from Proto-Germanic *hlusnijaną, *hlusnōną (compare Middle High German lüsenen), from Proto-Germanic *hlusēną (compare Old High German hlosēn), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱlew- (“to hear”).
Cognate with Swedish lyssna (“to listen”).
Compare Ancient Greek κλαίω (klaíō, “I make known, famous”), Welsh clywed (“to hear”), Latin clueō (“I am famous”), Lithuanian klausýti, Old Church Slavonic слушати (slušati, “to hear”), Sanskrit श्रोषति (śróṣati, “an exclamation used in making an offering with fire to the gods or departed spirits”) & Sanskrit श्लोक्य (ślókya, “voice, sound, noisy”)).
Related to loud and German lauschen.
Pronunciation
- enPR: lĭs'ən, lĭs'n, IPA(key): /ˈlɪs.ən/, [ˈlɪs.n̩]
- Hyphenation: lis‧ten
- Rhymes: -ɪsən
Verb
listen (third-person singular simple present listens, present participle listening, simple past and past participle listened)
- (intransitive except in archaic usage) To use one's sense of hearing in an intentional way; to make deliberate use of one's ears; to pay attention to or wait for a specific sound.
- Synonyms: heed, mind, note, pay attention, attend
- Antonym: ignore
Please listen carefully as I explain.
I could hear you talking upstairs, but I didn’t really listen to your conversation.
1906, Stanley J[ohn] Weyman, chapter I, in Chippinge Borough, New York, N.Y.: McClure, Phillips & Co., →OCLC, page 01:It was April 22, 1831, and a young man was walking down Whitehall in the direction of Parliament Street. […]. He halted opposite the Privy Gardens, and, with his face turned skywards, listened until the sound of the Tower guns smote again on the ear and dispelled his doubts.
1921, Ben Travers, chapter 1, in A Cuckoo in the Nest, Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page & Company, published 1925, →OCLC:He read the letter aloud. Sophia listened with the studied air of one for whom, even in these days, a title possessed some surreptitious allurement.
- (transitive, archaic)
1591 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The First Part of Henry the Sixt”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act V, scene iii]:Lady, vouchsafe to listen what I say.
a. 1749 (date written), James Thomson, “Summer”, in The Seasons, London: […] A[ndrew] Millar, and sold by Thomas Cadell, […], published 1768, →OCLC:Here laid his Scrip, with wholesome Viands fill'd, / There, listening every Noise, his watchful Dog.
- [with to]
- I like to listen to music.
- [with for]
- You should listen for the starting gun.
- (intransitive) To accept advice or obey instruction; to agree or assent.
- Synonym: mind
- Antonym: disregard
- Listen, the only reason I yelled at you was because I was upset, OK?
- Good children listen to their parents.
1943 November – 1944 February (date written; published 1945 August 17), George Orwell [pseudonym; Eric Arthur Blair], Animal Farm […], London: Secker & Warburg, published May 1962, →OCLC:Never listen when they tell you that Man and the animals have a common interest […].
Usage notes
- In English, listen and hear are two primary verbs relating to audial perception. To hear most commonly represents automatic, unconscious, or passive perception of sound, while listen generally represents intentional, conscious, or purposeful use of the sense of hearing. The difference is expressed in the following quotation:
- As the silence took hold in the darkness, Sam realized that she had been hearing, though not listening to, various low-level sounds—the hum of air conditioning and life support, the pulse of some faraway oxygen pump, the faint buzz of the electrical and lighting systems. —Justin Richards (1999) Demontage, chapter 5, page 92.
- A similar distinction exists between see and watch in English.
Quotations
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:listen.
Synonyms
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
Translations
to pay attention to a sound
- Afrikaans: luister (af)
- Albanian: dëgjoj (sq), ndi , ni(gheg)
- Amharic: ማዳመጥ (madamäṭ)
- Arabic: أَصْغَى (ʔaṣḡā), أَنْصَتَ (ʔanṣata), اِسْتَمَعَ (ar) (istamaʕa), سَمِعَ (ar) (samiʕa)
- Egyptian Arabic: سمع (simiʕ)
- Moroccan Arabic: سمع (ar) (smaʕ)
- South Levantine Arabic: سمع (simiʕ)
- Aragonese: ascuitar (an)
- Armenian: լսել (hy) (lsel)
- Aromanian: ascultu
- Assamese: শুনা (xuna)
- Asturian: escuchar (ast)
- Azerbaijani: dinləmək (az), qulaq asmaq
- Bashkir: тыңлау (tıñlaw), (Eastern) тыңдау (tıñdaw)
- Basque: entzun, aditu
- Belarusian: слу́хаць impf (slúxacʹ), паслу́хаць pf (paslúxacʹ)
- Bengali: শোনা (bn) (śōna)
- Bikol Central: himati (bcl)
- Breton: selaou (br)
- Bulgarian: слу́шам (bg) impf (slúšam)
- Burmese: နားထောင် (my) (na:htaung)
- Catalan: escoltar (ca)
- Cebuano: dungog (pagdungog), mamati (pagpamati), paminaw (pagpaminaw)
- Cherokee: ᎠᏛᏓᏍᏗᎭ (advdasdiha)
- Chickasaw: haklo
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 聽 / 听 (teng1, ting1)
- Dungan: тин (tin)
- Eastern Min: 聽 / 听 (tiăng)
- Gan: 聽 / 听 (tiang1 / tin1)
- Hakka: 聽 / 听 (thâng)
- Hokkien: 聽 / 听 (zh-min-nan) (thiaⁿ)
- Jin: 聽 / 听 (ting1)
- Mandarin: 聽 / 听 (zh) (tīng)
- Northern Min: 聽聆 / 听聆 (tia̿ng-nī / tia̿ng-nīng / tia̿ng-līng)
- Wu: 聽 / 听 (1thin)
- Xiang: 聽 / 听 (tin1)
- Chuvash: итле (itle)
- Cimbrian: lusan
- Czech: poslouchat (cs) impf, poslechnout (cs) pf
- Danish: lytte
- Dutch: luisteren (nl)
- Esperanto: aŭskulti
- Estonian: kuulama, tähele panema
- Evenki: до̄лды̄мӣ (dōldīmī), до̄лды̄н (dōldīn)
- Faroese: lurta
- Finnish: kuunnella (fi)
- Franco-Provençal: acutar
- French: écouter (fr)
- Friulian: scoltâ
- Galician: atender (gl), escoitar (gl), oír (gl)
- Gallurese: iscultà
- Georgian: მოსმენა (mosmena), სმენა (smena), გაგონება (gagoneba)
- German: hören (de), zuhören (de)
- Alemannic German: zuelose
- Gothic: 𐌷𐌰𐌿𐍃𐌾𐌰𐌽 (hausjan)
- Greek: ακούω (el) (akoúo)
- Ancient: ἀκροάομαι (akroáomai), ἀκούω (akoúō)
- Hadza: exekeke
- Haitian Creole: koute
- Hawaiian: hoʻolohe
- Hebrew: הִקְשִׁיב (he) (hikshív), הֶאֱזִין (he) (he'ezín)
- Hiligaynon: pamati (magpamati, mamati, pamatian)
- Hindi: सुनना (hi) (sunnā)
- Hungarian: hallgat (hu), figyel (hu)
- Icelandic: hlusta (is) (á (is))
- Ido: askoltar (io)
- Indonesian: dengarkan (id)
- Interlingua: ascoltar
- Irish: éist
- Istriot: scoltà
- Italian: ascoltare (it)
- Japanese: 聞く (ja) (きく, kiku)
- Kabuverdianu: obi, uví
- Kabyle: ssefled
- Kannada: ಆಲಿಸು (kn) (ālisu)
- Kashmiri: بوزُن (bōzun)
- Kashubian: czëc
- Kazakh: тыңдау (kk) (tyñdau), есту (kk) (estu)
- Khiamniungan Naga: ā-āng
- Khmer: ស្ដាប់ (km) (sdap)
- Kongo: kuwa
- Korean: 듣다 (ko) (deutda)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: گوێ دان (gwê dan)
- Northern Kurdish: guhdarî kirin (ku), guh dan (ku)
- Kyrgyz: угуу (ky) (uguu), тыңшоо (tıŋşoo), тыңдоо (tıŋdoo)
- Ladin: scuter
- Lao: ຟັງ (fang)
- Latgalian: klauseitīs
- Latin: auscultō, audiō (la), exaudio
- Latvian: klausīties (lv)
- Limburgish: loestere (li) (nao)
- Lithuanian: klausyti (lt)
- Livonian: kūldõ
- Lombard: ascoltà
- Lutuv: naathlie
- Lü: please add this translation if you can
- Macedonian: слуша impf (sluša)
- Malay: dengar (ms)
- Malayalam: കേൾക്കുക (ml) (kēḷkkuka)
- Maltese: issamma
- Manchu: ᡩᠣᠨᠵᡳᠮᠪᡳ (donjimbi)
- Maori: whakaoko, whakarongo, whakataringa
- Marathi: ऐकणे (aikṇe)
- Middle English: listnen
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: чагнах (mn) (čagnax), сонсох (mn) (sonsox)
- Nahuatl: caqui (nah)
- Nanai: до̄лди- (dōlʒi-)
- Neapolitan: sentì, ntennere
- Norman: êcouter
- Northern Ohlone: taahe
- Northern Thai: please add this translation if you can
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: lytte (no)
- Occitan: escotar (oc)
- Odia: ଶୁଣିବା (or) (śuṇibā)
- Ojibwe: babaamendam
- Old Church Slavonic:
- Cyrillic: слоушати impf (slušati)
- Old East Slavic: слꙋшати impf (slušati)
- Old English: hlystan, ġehīeran
- Old French: escouter, esculter
- Old Turkic: 𐱃𐰃𐰭𐰞𐰀 (tïŋla-)
- Oroqen: dɔ꞉ldi-
- Ottoman Turkish: دیكلهمك (diŋlemek)
- Pannonian Rusyn: слухац impf (sluxac)
- Papiamentu: skucha
- Pashto: غوږ نيول (ğwag niwəl)
- Pennsylvania German: hariche
- Persian:
- Iranian Persian: گوش دادَن (guš dâdan), گوش کَرْدَن (guš kardan), اِسْتِماع کَرْدَن (estemâ' kardan), نِیوشیدَن (niyušidan) (literary), گوشیدَن (gušidan)
- Phuthi: mamela
- Polish: słuchać (pl) impf
- Portuguese: escutar (pt)
- Quechua: uyariy
- Romanian: asculta (ro)
- Romansch: tadlar, audi, tedlar, tarlar, tadler
- Russian: слу́шать (ru) impf (slúšatʹ), послу́шать (ru) pf (poslúšatʹ)
- Sanskrit: शृणोति (sa) (śṛṇoti)
- Sardinian: aiscultare, aiscurtare, ascultare
- Campidanese: ascurtai
- Logudorese: ascurtare, iscultare, iscurtare
- Sassarese: iscultà
- Scottish Gaelic: èisd, èist
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: слу̏шати impf, по̀слушати pf
- Roman: slȕšati (sh) impf, pòslušati (sh) pf
- Shan: please add this translation if you can
- Sicilian: ascutari (scn)
- Sinhalese: ඇහුම්කන් දෙනවා (æhumkan denawā), අහනවා (ahanawā)
- Slovak: počúvať impf, poslúchnuť pf
- Slovene: poslušati (sl) impf
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: słuchaś impf
- Upper Sorbian: słušeć impf, роsłuсhаć pf
- Sotho: mamela (st)
- Spanish: escuchar (es)
- Swahili: kusikiza (sw), kusikiliza
- Swedish: lyssna (sv)
- Sylheti: ꠢꠥꠘꠣ (huna)
- Tagalog: dinig (tl) (dinggin), kinig (pakinggan), makinig
- Tajik: гӯш додан (güš dodan), гӯш кардан (tg) (güš kardan), ниюшидан (niyušidan) (literary)
- Tamil: கேள் (ta) (kēḷ)
- Tatar: тыңларга (tıñlarga)
- Telugu: ఆలకించు (te) (ālakiñcu), వినుట (te) (vinuṭa)
- Thai: ฟัง (th) (fang)
- Tibetan: གསོན་པ (gson pa)
- Tok Pisin: harim
- Tongan: fanongo
- Turkish: dinlemek (tr)
- Turkmen: diňlemek
- Ugaritic: 𐎌𐎎𐎓 (šmʿ)
- Ukrainian: слу́хати (uk) impf (slúxaty)
- Urdu: سُنْنا (sunnā)
- Uzbek: tinglamoq (uz), eshitmoq (uz)
- Venetan: scoltar (vec)
- Vietnamese: nghe (vi), lắng nghe (vi)
- Welsh: gwrando (cy)
- West Frisian: harkje
- Xhosa: mamela
- Yiddish: הערן (hern), צוהערן (tsuhern)
- Zhuang: dingh, nyi
- Zulu: lalela
|
to expect or wait for a sound
- Afrikaans: luister (af)
- Albanian: ve vesh, mbaj vesh
- Arabic: أَنْصَتَ (ʔanṣata)
- Armenian: ականջ դնել (hy) (akanǰ dnel)
- Asturian: escuchar (ast)
- Basque: entzun
- Bikol Central: (please verify) dengogen
- Bulgarian: ослу́швам се (oslúšvam se), вслу́швам се (vslúšvam se)
- Catalan: escoltar (ca)
- Cebuano: (paminawa)
- Czech: naslouchat (cs)
- Danish: lytte, høre efter
- Dutch: luisteren (nl), opletten (nl)
- Estonian: kuulama, kuulatama
- Faroese: lurta
- Finnish: kuunnella (fi)
- French: tendre l'oreille (fr), guetter (fr)
- Galician: escoitar (gl)
- Georgian: მოსმენა (mosmena)
- German: lauschen (de)
- Hiligaynon: pamati (magpamati, mamati, pamatian)
- Hindi: सुनना (hi) (sunnā)
- Ibanag: maginna
- Icelandic: hlusta (is) (eftir (is))
- Ilocano: agdengngeg, denggen, dumngeg
- Italian: stare in ascolto per, sentire (it)
- Ivatan: adngeyen
- Japanese: 聞く (ja) (きく, kiku)
- Kabuverdianu: obi, uví
- Kabyle: ssefled
- Kapampangan: makiramdam
- Korean: 듣다 (ko) (deutda)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: گوێ دان (gwê dan)
- Northern Kurdish: guhdarî kirin (ku), guh dan (ku)
- Latgalian: klauseitīs
- Latin: ausculto, exaudio
- Latvian: klausīties (lv)
- Limburgish: loestere (li) (nao/loc.), óplètte
- Lithuanian: klausyti (lt)
- Lower Sorbian: słuchaś
- Maguindanao: pakinig
- Malay: pasang telinga
- Maranao: makineg, pimakinog
- Marathi: ऐकणे (aikṇe)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: lytte (no)
- Occitan: escotar (oc)
- Odia: please add this translation if you can
- Ojibwe: nandotan
- Old English: hlosnian
- Pangasinan: odengel, pakanggel
- Pashto: غوږ نيول (ğwag niwəl)
- Polish: nasłuchiwać
- Portuguese: escutar (pt)
- Romanian: asculta (ro)
- Russian: слу́шать (ru) impf (slúšatʹ)
- Scottish Gaelic: èisd
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: слу̏шати impf, по̀слушати pf
- Roman: slȕšati (sh) impf, pòslušati (sh) pf
- Slovak: načúvať
- Sotho: mamela (st)
- Spanish: escuchar (es)
- Swahili: sikiza (sw)
- Swedish: lyssna (sv)
- Tagalog: dinig (tl) (dinggin), kinig (pakinggan)
- Tamil: மெதுவா கேள் (metuvā kēḷ)
- Tausug: dumongog
- Telugu: ఆలకించు (te) (ālakiñcu)
- Thai: ฟัง (th) (fang)
- Tongan: fanongo
- Turkish: dinlemek (tr)
- Ukrainian: слу́хати (uk) impf (slúxaty)
- Urdu: سُنْنا (sunnā)
- Vietnamese: chờ đợi (vi), chờ (vi), đợi cho
- Yiddish: הערן (hern)
|
to accept advice or obey instruction
- Afrikaans: luister (af)
- Albanian: dëgjoj (sq) , marvesh
- Arabic: أَطَاعَ (ʔaṭāʕa)
- Armenian: լսել (hy) (lsel), ենթարկվել (hy) (entʻarkvel)
- Asturian: escuchar (ast)
- Basque: aditu, kasu egin, jaramon egin
- Bulgarian: отстъ́пвам (bg) impf (otstǎ́pvam)
- Catalan: escoltar (ca)
- Cebuano: patalinghugi
- Chickasaw: ihaklo
- Czech: poslouchat (cs)
- Danish: høre efter
- Dutch: gehoorzamen (nl), luisteren (nl)
- Estonian: kuulama
- Faroese: lurta eftir
- Finnish: kuunnella (fi), uskoa (fi)
- French: écouter (fr)
- Galician: atender (gl), oír (gl)
- Gallurese: iscultà
- German: hören (de)
- Greek: ακούω (el) (akoúo)
- Ancient: ἀκούω (akoúō), εἰσακούω (eisakoúō)
- Hawaiian: lohe
- Hebrew: הקשיב (he) (hikshív), האזין (he) (he'ezín)
- Hiligaynon: pamati
- Hindi: सुनना (hi) (sunnā)
- Hungarian: hallgat (hu)
- Icelandic: hlusta (is) (á (is))
- Indonesian: mendengarkan (id)
- Italian: dare (it) ascolto (it), dar retta
- Japanese: 聞く (ja) (きく, kiku)
- Kabuverdianu: obi, uví
- Kabyle: ssefled
- Khmer: ស្ដាប់ (km) (sdap)
- Korean: 듣다 (ko) (deutda), 들어주다 (ko) (deureojuda)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: گوێ گرتن (gwê girtin)
- Northern Kurdish: guhdarî kirin (ku), guh dan (ku)
- Latgalian: klauseit
- Latin: auscultō, audiō (la)
- Latvian: klausīt
- Limburgish: loestere (li) (nao/loc.)
- Lithuanian: klausyti (lt)
- Lower Sorbian: słuchaś
- Malay: dengar (ms)
- Marathi: ऐकणे (aikṇe)
- Neapolitan: rà n’arecchia a
- Norman: êcouter
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: lystre (no)
- Occitan: escotar (oc)
- Odia: please add this translation if you can
- Ojibwe: babaamitam
- Old English: ġehīeran, ġehīersumian
- Ottoman Turkish: دیكلهمك (diŋlemek)
- Pashto: غوږ نيول (ğwag niwəl)
- Polish: usłuchać, słuchać (pl)
- Portuguese: ouvir (pt)
- Romanian: asculta (ro)
- Russian: слу́шать (ru) (slúšatʹ), слу́шаться (ru) (slúšatʹsja)
- Sardinian:
- Campidanese: ascurtai
- Logudorese: ascurtare, iscultare, iscurtare
- Sassarese: iscultà
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: слу̏шати impf, по̀слушати pf
- Roman: slȕšati (sh) impf, pòslušati (sh) pf
- Slovak: poslúchať
- Slovene: ubogati (sl), poslušati (sl)
- Sotho: mamela (st)
- Spanish: escuchar (es), atenerse (es)
- Swahili: sikiza (sw)
- Swedish: lyda (sv)
- Tagalog: dinig (tl) (dinggin), kinig (pakinggan, makinig)
- Tamil: கேள் (ta) (kēḷ)
- Telugu: సమ్మతించు (te) (sammatiñcu)
- Thai: ฟัง (th) (fang)
- Tibetan: ཉན (nyan)
- Turkish: dinlemek (tr)
- Ukrainian: слу́хати (uk) impf (slúxaty), послу́хати pf (poslúxaty), слу́хатися impf (slúxatysja) reflexive, послу́хатися pf (poslúxatysja)
- Urdu: سُنْنا (sunnā)
- Vietnamese: nghe theo, tuân theo (vi), vâng lời (vi)
|
to hear (something)
- Afrikaans: hoor (af)
- Albanian: dëgjoj (sq) , ni (gheg)
- Ancient Greek: ἀκούω (akoúō)
- Arabic: سَمِعَ (ar) (samiʕa)
- Egyptian Arabic: سمع (semeʕ)
- Armenian: լսել (hy) (lsel)
- Basque: entzun, aditu
- Bulgarian: чу́вам (bg) impf (čúvam), слу́шам (bg) impf (slúšam)
- Cebuano: patalinghugi
- Chickasaw: haklo
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 聽 / 听 (zh) (tīng)
- Czech: slyšet (cs) impf
- Dutch: horen (nl)
- Egyptian: (sḏm)
- Esperanto: aŭskulti
- Estonian: kuulma (et)
- Faroese: hoyra (fo)
- Finnish: kuulla (fi)
- French: écouter (fr)
- Galician: oír (gl)
- German: hören (de)
- Greek: ακούω (el) (akoúo)
- Hawaiian: lohe
- Hebrew: שמע (he) (shama)
- Hiligaynon: pamati
- Hindi: सुनना (hi) (sunnā), कान लगाना (kān lagānā)
- Hungarian: hallgat (hu)
- Icelandic: hlusta (is), heyra (is)
- Irish: éist
- Isan: please add this translation if you can
- Italian: sentire (it)
- Japanese: 聞く (ja) (きく, kiku)
- Kabuverdianu: obi, uví
- Kabyle: ssefled
- Khmer: ឮ (km) (lɨɨ), ស្ដាប់ឮ (sdap-lɨɨ)
- Korean: 들리다 (ko) (deullida)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: گوێ لێبون (gwê lêbun)
- Northern Kurdish: guh lê bûn (ku)
- Lao: please add this translation if you can
- Latgalian: dzierdēt
- Latin: exaudiō, audio (la), ausculto
- Latvian: dzirdēt (lv)
- Limburgish: loestere (li), heure (li), huuere (li)
- Lithuanian: girdėti (lt)
- Lü: please add this translation if you can
- Malay: dengar (ms)
- Marathi: ऐकणे (aikṇe)
- Neapolitan: sentì
- Northern Thai: please add this translation if you can
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: høre (no)
- Nynorsk: høyra
- Ojibwe: bizindaw
- Pashto: اورول (awrawəl)
- Persian: شِنیدَن (fa) (šenidan), شُنیدَن (fa) (šonidan)
- Polish: wysłuchać (pl), słuchać (pl)
- Portuguese: escutar (pt), ouvir (pt)
- Romanian: asculta (ro)
- Russian: слы́шать (ru) impf (slýšatʹ), услы́шать (ru) pf (uslýšatʹ)
- Scottish Gaelic: cluinn
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: чу̏ти impf
- Roman: čȕti (sh) impf
- Shan: please add this translation if you can
- Slovak: počuť pf, slyšať impf
- Slovene: slišati (sl)
- Sotho: utlwa (st)
- Spanish: oír (es)
- Swahili: sikiza (sw)
- Swedish: lyssna (sv)
- Tagalog: dinig (tl) (dinggin), rinig (narinig)
- Tamil: கேள் (ta) (kēḷ)
- Telugu: విను (te) (vinu)
- Thai: ยิน (th) (yin)
- Tocharian B: klyaus-
- Tok Pisin: harim
- Tongan: fanongo
- Turkish: duymak (tr)
- Ukrainian: чу́ти (uk) pf (čúty)
- Urdu: سُنْنا (sunnā), کان لَگانا (kān lagānā)
- Vietnamese: nghe (vi), để ý đến
- Zhuang: please add this translation if you can
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Noun
listen (plural listens)
- An instance of listening.
- Synonym: (of recorded audio) play
Give the motor a listen and tell me if it sounds off.
2016 March 29, Victor Luckerson, “There's a New Way To Listen To All the Remixes You Want”, in Time[2]:The diss song, “Back to Back,” now has more than 124 million listens, a sign that the streaming can attract a sizable audience for a single track.
2020, Emily Segal, Mercury Retrograde, New York: Deluge Books, →ISBN:I hadn't spoken to her in a year, but she could still see my listens on the music platform we both used.
Derived terms
See also
Anagrams
Czech
Etymology
From list + -en.
Pronunciation
Noun
listen m inan
- (botany) bract
Declension
This noun needs an inflection-table template.
Further reading
Danish
Noun
listen c
- definite singular of liste
- definite singular of list
Dutch
Pronunciation
Noun
listen
- plural of list
Anagrams
German
Etymology
From Liste + -en.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈlɪstn̩]
- Hyphenation: lis‧ten
- Homophone: Listen
Verb
listen (weak, third-person singular present listet, past tense listete, past participle gelistet, auxiliary haben)
- to list
- Synonym: auflisten
Conjugation
Conjugation of
listen (weak, auxiliary
haben)
1Rare except in very formal contexts; alternative in würde normally preferred.
Composed forms of
listen (weak, auxiliary
haben)
Derived terms
Further reading
Norwegian Bokmål
Noun
listen m or f
- definite masculine singular of liste
- definite masculine singular of list
Spanish
Verb
listen
- inflection of listar:
- third-person plural present subjunctive
- third-person plural imperative
Swedish
Noun
listen
- definite singular of list
Anagrams