单词 | notice |
释义 | no·tice I. 1. a. (1) < subject to change without notice — Dun's Review > < was notice that Britain meant to crack down on violence — Time > < give notice of the fat and wrinkles coming to the young bride — H.M.Parshley > (2) < evacuating a school building … in a minute's notice — Rose Bernadette > < upon reasonable notice, these charges are subject to adjustment — Bulletin of Bates College > < ready to leave at short notice > < allow me ten minutes' notice > (3) < tenants' right freely to give notice — Store Bolin > (4) < a notice to quit leased premises > (5) < are on notice that their military supply centers … would no longer be a privileged sanctuary — New York Times > < putting all … court personnel on notice that fundamental rights had to be observed — E.E.Nobleman > b. < notice of any errors … should be addressed — Federal Guide (Australia) > < give notice of a poet — H.A.Larrabee > c. (1) archaic (2) (3) (4) d. obsolete 2. a. (1) < first attracted notice with his short novel > < will be brought under the notice of the police — Priscilla Hughes > < the first … to receive notice from history — W.J.Entwistle & W.A.Morison > — often used in the phrase take notice < doubted whether she would take much notice — Gerard Bourke > < you sit up and take notice > (2) < brought him into public notice — Gearoid O'Sullivan > b. < she had very little notice from any but him — Jane Austen > 3. < one sees crude notices of patent medicines — American Guide Series: Florida > < inserted a notice in the newspaper > < all the societies put up printed notices of their activities — S.P.B.Mais > 4. a. < the stage play received … glowing notices — C.J.Rolo > < opened to enthusiastic notices — Current Biography > b. < presume that your book … is not out yet though I have heard rumors of notices — O.W.Holmes †1935 > < a collection of book notices — British Book News > c. < the books under notice … are a valuable addition — Times Literary Supplement > < considered 2,179 publications and selected 887 for notice — L.H.Evans > II. transitive verb 1. a. archaic b. < hearing on the motion was noticed for February 14 — Caryl Chessman > 2. a. < the city merchant's house … that is noticed in another chapter — Elizabeth Montizambert > < three of the four men noticed by name — H.M.Reichard > b. < asked me to notice the volume — O.W.Holmes †1935 > < noticed in these pages when it came out last year — Times Literary Supplement > 3. a. < were noticed only by a curtsey — Jane Austen > b. (1) < noticed a strange odor in the room > < some attractive feature that can be noticed — Agnes M. Miall > < doesn't notice a word — Charles Dickens > < began to notice other men — Time > < barely noticed the clock strike midnight — Erle Stanley Gardner > (2) < the first thing that we notice is that our thought moves with … incredible rapidity — J.H.Robinson †1936 > < worth while to notice that belief in the supernatural presupposes a belief in natural law — W.R.Inge > 4. < notice a tenant > intransitive verb Synonyms: see see |
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