caveat的意思和读音

caveat

: [ˈkeɪviˌæt] : ['keɪvi.æt]

n.

caveats  

n.warning,caution,admonition,qualification,stipulation

caveatn.

1.a warning that particular things need to be considered before sth can be done

n.1.,2.;〈;【3.

n.1.a warning of the limits of a particular agreement or statement

1. catholic ? adj. caveat ? n. ; cavern ? n. , ...

2. catholic ? adj. caveat ? n. ; cavern ? n. , ...

3. cathedral n. (),; caveat n. ; caviar n. , ...

4.」(caveat),

5. lapse , caveat , insurrection , , , ...

6. Board of Governors caveat clearing house ; …

7.caveat201111%20%,

8.CaveatPristine Agrofood。“

:,,,,,

1.A quick caveat, before you hit me with a rolled-up Ms. magazine: I don't really think stay-at-home dads are better than stay-at-home moms.

2.One caveat: these numbers likely vary somewhat in reliability, collected as they were from as Touch puts it, "a range of online sources. "Touch”。

3.But there is a crucial caveat: how much worse might the politics get?

4.Even so, the promise came with a caveat: that the speed of enlargement must take account of the EU's "absorption capacity" .”。

5.But this caveat should not cloud the central issue: a coup in a region which has shed authoritarianism should not be allowed to stand.

6.His resignation came with a caveat in which he stated he would move aside once austerity measures were installed.

7.He would pronounce the word "caveat" the way you and I might speak of some sort of sexual deviation.

8.The one major caveat here: Only eight teams have had an easier schedule over the last quarter of the season.

9.New findings in neurology always seem to come with the caveat that there are subtleties that need to be explained.

10.Caveat: If you started a blog about how you're getting out of debt that could grow into a very nice business.