ear
n.
part of the body used for hearing; ability to differentiate between musical tones; sense of hearing; good hearing; ear of corn, corncob
v.
form the area of a grain plant that includes the grains; plow,cut into the soil with a plow (British); cultivate, prepare the ground for planting, grow crops (British)
EARS
EARS may mean:
DARPA's Effective Affordable Reusable Speech-To-Text project.The
Liberal Democrats'
Election Agents Record System.Extended Action Request System used in Fujitsu's Employee to deal with any fault calls.Environmental Activities Reporting System - see Corporate Social Responsibility Reporting.East Anglia Rocket Society, a model rocket club in East Anglia, UK, centered around Cambridge.Evidence of Alien contact Revealed in Scripture - An organization in the state of Wisconsin, USA, including a book published in 2003 by the same name, which discusses evidence for UFOs and other paranormal phenomena in the Christian Bible. see
http://www.thelightside.org/ears
See more at Wikipedia.org...
Ear
Ears
ear
Noun
1. the sense organ for hearing and equilibrium
(hypernym) sense organ, sensory receptor, receptor
(part-holonym) head, caput
(part-meronym) vestibule of the ear
2. good hearing; "he had a keen ear"; "a good ear for pitch"
(hypernym) hearing, audition, auditory sense, sense of hearing, auditory modality
3. the externally visible cartilaginous structure of the external ear
(synonym) auricle, pinna
(hypernym) cartilaginous structure
(hyponym) cauliflower ear
(part-holonym) external ear, outer ear
(part-meronym) earlobe, ear lobe
4. attention to what is said; "he tried to get her ear"
(hypernym) attention, attending
5. fruiting spike of a cereal plant especially corn
(synonym) spike, capitulum
(hypernym) fruit
(hyponym) mealie
(part-holonym) corn, maize, Indian corn, Zea mays
Ears
To dream of seeing ears, an evil and designing person is keeping watch over your conversation to work you harm.
Ten Thousand Dreams Interpreted, or "What's in a dream": a scientific and practical exposition; By Gustavus Hindman, 1910. For the open domain e-text see:
Guttenberg Project