Examples of using "Sordo" in a sentence and their english translations:
I am not deaf.
He's deaf.
Tom is quite deaf.
Is your dog deaf?
- Tom's deaf.
- Tom is deaf.
He's going deaf.
He's quite deaf.
He's deaf, isn't he?
- I'm deaf.
- I am deaf.
Tom is going deaf.
Are you deaf or what?
Tom is also deaf.
He was also deaf.
Tom is deaf, isn't he?
My uncle is deaf.
Are you deaf?
The dog is deaf.
He's going deaf, isn't he?
He's almost deaf, isn't he?
Are you deaf?
I have a dull ache here.
- I know that Tom is deaf.
- I know Tom is deaf.
Tom is going deaf, isn't he?
He's both deaf and blind.
- I am not deaf.
- I'm not deaf.
The poor child was born deaf and dumb.
Are you deaf?
I'm not deaf.
Tom is deaf in one ear.
- I know that Tom is almost deaf.
- I know Tom is almost deaf.
He's deaf in one ear, isn't he?
Tom is both deaf and blind.
- I wonder if Tom is going deaf.
- I wonder whether Tom is going deaf.
Tom is deaf in one ear, isn't he?
I'm blind, not deaf.
I wasn't born deaf.
He went deaf as a result of an accident.
There's no one more deaf than he who does not want to listen.
- Are you deaf or what?
- Are you deaf or something?
Are you deaf or stupid?
I'm deaf and mute while I'm eating.
Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see.
I just told you. Are you deaf?
It requires wisdom to understand wisdom: the music is nothing if the audience is deaf.
How can rattlesnakes localise their prey and track it through grass and bushes, after they wound it, if they're fully deaf?