From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishhear somebody out phrasal verbLISTENto listen to all of what someone wants to tell you without interrupting them Just hear me out, will you? → hear→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
hear out• Before you go apoplectic, hear me out.• His grandmother hurried down, and they heard her cry out.• Eve heard Benny cry out, and then she saw the faces frozen as the car came towards her.• Hear me out first, Jane, and then you can say what you think.• They heard him call out in fright.• There is a song we always used to hear, Out in the desert, romantic soft and clear.• I can hear them out my window, laughing, screaming and playing.• Half way down the first flight, he stopped, hearing some one come out of an apartment on the second floor.• Knapp heard him out patiently but still refused to change his mind.• Corbett heard her out, torn between his desire to sleep and excitement at what he had discovered.