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"You hear but you don't listen" or "You listen but you don't hear"?
P listens to/listened to X entails P hears/heard X; I.e, if you listened to it, you heard it; and if you looked at it, you saw it. Generally one uses the perceptual verb only if one can't use the volitional one that entails it. The examples given in the OQ -- You look, but you don't see, for instance -- use intransitive look.
pejorative language - You heard me! (expression) - English Language ...
To answer your second question, "You heard me" is quite impassioned. The reason why you might not say it in a formal situation is not because it's an specifically informal phrase in and of itself, but because it is highly emotive. There is no reason why you can't say it in a formal situation, aside from the fact that it is quite a 'strong ...
meaning of "you heard it here first" - English Language & Usage Stack ...
Nevertheless "you heard it here first" encapsulates the foolish preoccupation with scooping everyone else that remains a brass ring in throughout the news media. It reminds me of the tagline that an early rock'n'roll-focused radio station had: "We start 'em; the others chart 'em."
hear of Vs hear about - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
I heard about a new restaurant in the Gaslamp Quarter. [i.e. somebody told me about a new restaurant (and she wouldn't shut up about it for three trolley stops).] A similar distinction exists with knowing of and knowing about , telling of / telling about , and similar pairs of verbs about information transmission.
Which of these is the correct usage of the words "listen", "hear"?
As reported in another recent question, listen is an intransitive verb and does not take a direct object; you must use a prepositional phrase to specify the thing being perceived. Hear, on the other hand, is transitive and can take an object, so you can say: You must hear this song. Have you heard this song? You must listen to this song.
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