- 看过 caveat 的人也看了 :
- admonition
- monition
- alarm
- caution
- forewarning
- sign
caveat 的定义
- a warning or caution; admonition.
- Law. a legal notice to a court or public officer to suspend a certain proceeding until the notifier is given a hearing: a caveat filed against the probate of a will.
caveat 近义词
warning
caveat 的近义词 7 个
更多caveat例句
- Despite those caveats, if you still think the increase in quality would be useful for you like the examples below, keep reading.
- With the caveat that this is highly biased promotional material, Xaiomi's new camera looks darn near invisible in all but one shot of the video.
- The latest warning comes from Bank of America—with some caveats.
- Many people offered takes with caveats about how it all depends on the baby, or the employer, or your partner.
- An important caveat to these explanations, however, is that they often aren’t based on very much hard data.
- The one caveat: Asprey advises only buying butter made from grass-fed or pastured cows.
- Experts we spoke with said this is a glaring caveat that makes it difficult to create a national estimate from the results.
- Hulagu then gave his men licence to rape, kill and plunder with the caveat that Christians and Jews were to be spared.
- Instead, MacMillan has the temerity to issue a caveat mid-thrust.
- But then, just when we feared that the Cox we suspected we knew was about to get too schmaltzy, too idyllic, she adds a caveat.
- Yet a caveat is needed, for the intense interest we take in the characters of a novel like The Nabob scarcely suggests strolling.
- In the meanwhile it should hardly be necessary to enter a caveat against the popular idea that we are now “in broad daylight”.
- This caveat duly lodged, he descended to the deck of his sloop, where he found the cabin boy shaking as with an ague.
- Besides the work your correspondent mentions, he wrote a book, entitled a Caveat against Seducers.
- Meanwhile you trust at your peril, caveat emptor, your eyes are your market, or words to similar effect.