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"hear out" is correct and usable in written English.
It is generally used when you want someone to listen to you, or to hear you out completely before you make a judgement. For example, you might say, "Please hear me out before you make your decision."
Dictionary
hear out
verb
To listen to someone until that person has finished.
Exact(60)
"Sweetest sound you could hear out here".
Then there are pitches that require a stone-faced adviser to hear out, like one for the mobile electrolysis machine.
As we fled, we could hear, out in the kitchenette, the approaching beat of jungle tom-toms.
OPEN SEAT A longstanding practice whereby an Esalen facilitator makes himself available for two hours to hear out any thoughts or feelings you might have.
Starbucks has loyal customers who may well be prepared to hear out the firm's side of it and judge the case on its merits.
Several admired her willingness to sit in closed rooms and calmly ask questions and hear out their anger.
Share your passion for your company and brand, but also be prepared to hear out others.
"We have found remarkable abilities to hear out the details of complex sounds among musicians," he says.
High-net-worth investors are most interested in an adviser's willingness to hear out their ideas and needs.
The man was so certain that the complaints were not true that he agreed to hear out his colleagues at a team meeting moderated by Townsend.
She's also proof that we should always hear out our more eloquent heretics.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com