to listen to or watch a particular broadcast on the radio or television
to understand something such as a situation or someone else’s feelings
And if you tune in at just the right time, you can see her wipe her little behind with twenty-dollar bills and flush them down the toilet!
It looked to Cook very much as if it was the rank and file who were calling the tune in these conversations with their so-called boss.
Millions of people tuned in to watch the election results.
The truth was that he could scarcely carry a tune in his head.
We start by having ten minutes ' silence so that we can collect our thoughts and ` tune in ", as it were.
You’re more tuned in to the subject than most people.
tunes in
tuning in
tuned in
There is no origin for this phrasal verb
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