NOTE


Meaning of NOTE in English

transcription, транскрипция: [ noʊt ]

( notes, noting, noted)

Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.

1.

A note is a short letter.

Stevens wrote him a note asking him to come to his apartment...

I’ll have to leave a note for Karen.

= message

N-COUNT

2.

A note is something that you write down to remind yourself of something.

I knew that if I didn’t make a note I would lose the thought so I asked to borrow a pen or pencil...

Take notes during the consultation as the final written report is very concise.

N-COUNT

3.

In a book or article, a note is a short piece of additional information.

See Note 16 on page p. 223.

N-COUNT

4.

A note is a short document that has to be signed by someone and that gives official information about something.

Since Mr Bennett was going to need some time off work, he asked for a sick note...

I’ve got half a ton of gravel in the lorry but he won’t sign my delivery note.

N-COUNT : with supp

5.

You can refer to a banknote as a note . ( BRIT; in AM, use bill )

They exchange traveller’s cheques at a different rate from notes.

...a five pound note.

N-COUNT

6.

In music, a note is the sound of a particular pitch, or a written symbol representing this sound.

She has a deep voice and doesn’t even try for the high notes...

N-COUNT : usu with supp

7.

You can use note to refer to a particular quality in someone’s voice that shows how they are feeling.

There is an unmistakable note of nostalgia in his voice when he looks back on the early years of the family business...

It was not difficult for him to catch the note of bitterness in my voice.

= tone

N-SING : with supp , usu N of n

8.

You can use note to refer to a particular feeling, impression, or atmosphere.

Yesterday’s testimony began on a note of passionate but civilized disagreement...

Somehow he tells these stories without a note of horror...

The furniture strikes a traditional note which is appropriate to its Edwardian setting.

N-SING : with supp

9.

If you note a fact, you become aware of it.

The White House has noted his promise to support any attack that was designed to enforce the UN resolutions...

Suddenly, I noted that the rain had stopped...

Haig noted how he ‘looked pinched and rather tired’.

VERB : V n , V that , V wh

10.

If you tell someone to note something, you are drawing their attention to it.

Note the statue to Sallustio Bandini, a prominent Sienese...

Please note that there are a limited number of tickets.

VERB : V n , V that

11.

If you note something, you mention it in order to draw people’s attention to it.

The report notes that export and import volumes picked up in leading economies...

The yearbook also noted a sharp drop in reported cases of sexually transmitted disease.

= observe

VERB : V that , V n

12.

When you note something, you write it down as a record of what has happened.

‘He has had his tonsils out and has been ill, too,’ she noted in her diary...

One policeman was clearly visible noting the number plates of passing cars...

A guard came and took our names and noted where each of us was sitting.

VERB : V with quote , V n , V wh , also V that

13.

see also noted , promissory note , sleeve note

14.

If you compare notes with someone on a particular subject, you talk to them and find out whether their opinion, information, or experience is the same as yours.

The women were busily comparing notes on the queen’s outfit...

= discuss

PHRASE : V inflects , oft PHR on n , PHR with n

15.

Someone or something that is of note is important, worth mentioning, or well-known.

...politicians of note...

He has published nothing of note in the last ten years.

PHRASE : n PHR

16.

If someone or something strikes a particular note or sounds a particular note , they create a particular feeling, impression, or atmosphere.

Before his first round of discussions, Mr Baker sounded an optimistic note...

Plants growing out of cracks in paving strike the right note up a cottage-garden path.

PHRASE : V inflects

17.

If you take note of something, you pay attention to it because you think that it is important or significant.

Take note of the weather conditions...

They took note that she showed no surprise at the news of the murder.

PHRASE : V inflects , oft PHR of n , PHR that

18.

to make a mental note: see mental

Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary.      Английский словарь Коллинз COBUILD для изучающих язык на продвинутом уровне.