Benjamin Franklin, and he said. "Believe none of what you hear and half of what you see.
Ben Franklin
"There are none so blind as those who will not see. The most deluded people are those who choose to ignore what they already know."These saying has it roots in the Bible:"Hear now this, O foolish people, and without understanding; which have eyes, and see not; which have ears, and hear not."(Jer. 5:21, King James version)First to use it in literature was Jonathan Swift, who wrote it in 'Polite Conversation' (1738).
You.
Immanuel Kant
aristotole said that the deaf people should be uneducated because the need to hear to learn
St. Augustine. but not about "me" but "God".
Benjamin Franklin.
Benjamin Franklin
This was said by poet and author Edgar Allan Poe in Graham's Magazine in 1845.
I did not hear half of what you said. Half of four is two.
Abraham Lincoln
It's the frightning realism that the gossip you hear is true. P.S. I wouldn't believe a word I've said.
I do believe so because the robosapien has to hear the cammand and ask you is this what you said in order to do the command so that is a yes.
I believe 'half four' is characteristic of British English. There are other ways to say this, eg 4.30 (said as as 'four-thirty').
I just read a short interview of Jennifer Hudson herself addressing this accusation. She never said the word no. She simply said don't believe what you hear.
Giraffes hear the same thing anything else can hear. If a lion were to growl as it pounced on said giraffe(s), the giraffe(s) will hear it. Otherwise, they hear anything within their hearing range.
I can-on hear you! (Get it? I can not hear you!)
Well, it actually depends on taste. But the most popular Eminem song is "Lose Yourself".