hearer
2.last it is accommodated by the hearer and guarantees the relevance of the utterance.
4.Opposition was especially strong in Africa under Augustine, who for nine years had been a Hearer.
5.This paper studies the effect of saturation pressure to the heat surface of a phase-change hearer.
6.Context is essential to the pragmatic study of language. It is generally considered as constituted by the knowledge shared by the speaker and the hearer.
7.Do not tell a good story even though you know one; Its narration will simply remind your hearer of a bad one.
8.a word specifying identity or spacial or temporal location from the perspective of a speaker or hearer in the context in which the communication occurs.
9.Behaviorists attempted to define the meaning of a language form as the “situation in which the speaker utters it and the response it calls forth in the hearer.” This theory, somewhat close to contextualism, is linked with psychological interest.
10.According to relevance theory, the goal of human communication is to achieve optimal relevance-an expectation on the part of the hearer that his endeavors at interpretation will yield adequate contextual effects at minimal processing effort.

