be deaf to in a sentence
- The audience then will not be deaf to what is going on.
- "She doesn't have to be deaf to have approval from us,"
- They might be expected to be deaf to the pleas of illegal immigrants.
- The victors must not be deaf to adverse views.
- It does require judges to be deaf to complaints that " It isn't fair ."
- It's difficult to find be deaf to in a sentence.
- We will be deaf to the voices and attempts to block Union legislation, " he said.
- People with these gadgets attached to their ears can be deaf to appeals for good manners.
- But it seems to keep yelling at you, as though you might be deaf to subtleties.
- He explains, The Minstrel had wished he would be deaf to every sound that was not beautiful.
- "You'd have to be deaf to intolerance,"
- He certainly does not understand the Navy's ethic : " When principle is involved, be deaf to expediency ."
- It would be useless to ask for some kind of honest gesture from officials who appear to be deaf to censure.
- Will they not henceforth be deaf to those advisers, if such there are, who would sever them from their brethren and connect them with aliens?
- A university student shaved her head and pretended to be deaf to convince people she had cancer and get them to give her money, prosecutors said.
- "The public will hear what they want to hear, and they will be deaf to the problems of bias, confounding, reverse causality or chance, " they wrote.
More: 1 2
Browse
- be deaf and blind in a sentence
- be deaf in an ear in a sentence
- be deaf in one ear in a sentence
- be deaf of an ear in a sentence
- be deaf of one ear in a sentence
- be dealt with according to law in a sentence
- be dealt with severely in a sentence
- be dear to in a sentence
- be dear to me in a sentence
- be death on in a sentence