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单词 notice
释义 no·tice
I. \ˈnōd.ə̇s, -ōtə̇s\ noun
(-s)
Etymology: Middle English notyce, from Middle French notice acquaintance, from Latin notitia, from notus (past participle of noscere to become acquainted with) + -itia -ice — more at know
1.
 a.
  (1) : formal or informal warning or intimation of something : announcement
   < subject to change without noticeDun'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) : a warning, announcement, or intimation given a specified time before the event to take place
   < 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) : notification by one of the parties to an agreement or relation (as by an employer to a laborer) of intention of terminating it at a specified time
   < tenants' right freely to give notice — Store Bolin >
  (4) : a communication of intelligence or of a claim or demand often required by statute or contract and prescribing the manner or form of giving it
   < a notice to quit leased premises >
  (5) : the condition of being warned or notified — usually used in the phrase on notice
   < 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. : information, intelligence
  < notice of any errors … should be addressed — Federal Guide (Australia) >
  < give notice of a poet — H.A.Larrabee >
 c.
  (1) archaic : knowledge
  (2) : actual knowledge of a pertinent legal fact — called also actual notice, express notice
  (3) : knowledge of a particular fact (as the terms of a lease when one knows a tenant is in possession) capable of being acquired by the exercise of reasonable care on the part of the person legally chargeable with it — called also implied notice
  (4) : knowledge of a particular fact (as from deeds recorded in a public registry office) imputed by a positive rule of law to a person regardless of his actual knowledge — called also constructive notice
 d. obsolete : notion, idea
2.
 a.
  (1) : attention, heed, observation
   < 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) : the condition of being noticed
   < brought him into public notice — Gearoid O'Sullivan >
 b. : polite or favorable attention : favor, respect, civility
  < she had very little notice from any but him — Jane Austen >
3. : a written or printed announcement or bulletin
 < 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. : a critical account or commentary on a play or other public performance
  < the stage play received … glowing notices — C.J.Rolo >
  < opened to enthusiastic noticesCurrent Biography >
 b. : book review
  < presume that your book … is not out yet though I have heard rumors of notices — O.W.Holmes †1935 >
  < a collection of book noticesBritish Book News >
 c. : critical examination : review, evaluation
  < the books under notice … are a valuable addition — Times Literary Supplement >
  < considered 2,179 publications and selected 887 for notice — L.H.Evans >
II. verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
Etymology: in sense 1a, from Middle English notysen to notify, from notyce; in other senses from notice (I)
transitive verb
1.
 a. archaic : notify, intimate
 b. : to give notice of the scheduling of (a legal proceeding) by placing on a court calendar
  < hearing on the motion was noticed for February 14 — Caryl Chessman >
2.
 a. : to comment or remark upon : make mention of : refer to
  < 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. : to write a notice of : review
  < 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. : to pay polite or favorable attention to : treat with attention or civility : greet, recognize
  < were noticed only by a curtsey — Jane Austen >
 b.
  (1) : to take notice of with the senses : pay attention to : see, sense, note
   < 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) : to take notice of with the mind : mark
   < 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. : to give a formal notice or notification to : serve a notice on
 < notice a tenant >
intransitive verb
: to take notice
Synonyms: see see
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更新时间:2025/1/27 21:55:23