
We hope you’ll consider spending time with our stories during your next journey.

Soon, we’ll canvas the US with more than 10,000 stories for you to enjoy. We’re launching HearHere with stories for California, Oregon, and Washington. hear h, (heard) h:d (v) (1) to perceive with the ears the sound made by someone or something (2) to be informed of (3) to give a formal official, or judicial hearing to (something) (4) to be among the audience at or of (something) (5) to receive information by the ear or otherwise (to hear from a friend) 1. But if your intent to get everyone to listen up, stick with hear hear. We suppose you could make a case for using here here in different circumstances. The latter is the correct way to write the phrase with the assumed meaning that it has in the British Parliament. Legacy is important to me - and the idea that HearHere could preserve our collective experiences in an unflinching way was - for me - the greatest opportunity of all. The debate between here here or hear hear is an easy one to resolve. It’s not only our responsibility, it’s our obligation to understand and to pass on faithfully the stories of the people who flourished here for thousands of years. The most important thing to me, and why I chose to be a part of this idea, is that we agreed as a group that no matter the region, we would always start with the history of the first people and the stories of first contact. The truth will always be more interesting than the lie - and HearHere gives us the opportunity to reveal it. I am in love with all the edges, all the disappointments, all the progress - all worth knowing. Why couldn’t we replicate every marker along the highway - even expanding from the usual paragraph in bronze that always left me wanting more. But it was this continuing curiosity that I began to think HearHere could satisfy without anyone having to leave the car. I am the guy that stops at the historical markers along the highway - usually bringing moans from everyone in the car. If you think of the link between the verb hear. When we took a deeper look at the idea, it was really playing into just what I do. A good way to remember the difference is to this that hear is spelled like ear. I learned about HearHere and met Woody Sears through an introduction by my wife who pitched me on the concept. I learned about HearHere and met Woody Sears through an. The idea has to make sense, but the team behind it is just as important. I have a habit of investing in ideas that catch me. To draw you in and offer up the history of the region unknown or forgotten. The idea has to make sense, but the team behind it is just as important. HearHere does many things, but our goal is very simple. Instead of an exclamation point, the expression typically uses a comma to separate the self-contained sentence, “hear, hear.” or “hear, hear!” It’s a well-established phrase often used in the legislative process, scriptwriting, historical fiction, and more.HearHere does many things, but our goal is very simple. It’s short for “hear, all ye good people, hear what this brilliant and eloquent speaker has to say!” But “hear, hear” is the correct expression that means an agreement with someone’s point. With words like roommate vs room mate, many get confused between “hear, hear” and “here, here” because they sound the same. What Does “Hear! Hear!” Mean? Origin and Examples in Writing

English reference books mention here, here only to note that it’s wrong. But for what it’s worth, hear, hear is the original form (the Oxford English Dictionary cites examples going back to the 17th century) and is the one listed in dictionaries. Here, hereis widely regarded as a misspelling, although it is a common one, and there are ways to logically justify its use.
