CAVEAT


Meaning of CAVEAT in English

ca ‧ ve ‧ at /ˈkæviæt, ˈkeɪv-/ BrE AmE noun [countable]

[ Date: 1500-1600 ; Language: Latin ; Origin: 'let him or her beware' , from cavere ; ⇨ ↑ caution 1 ]

formal a warning that something may not be completely true, effective etc

caveat that

She will be offered treatment, with the caveat that it may not work.

• • •

THESAURUS

▪ warning something that you say or do to tell people about danger, or to tell them not to do something:

All cigarette packets carry a government health warning.

|

She ignored her parents' warnings.

|

The army issued a warning that anyone who was out on the streets after dark was likely to be shot.

▪ caution formal an official warning or a piece of advice telling you to be careful:

Caution: do not install electrical equipment near or around water sources.

|

The video begins with a caution that you must do some warm-up exercises first.

▪ tip-off informal a warning that someone is about to do something, especially one given to the police about a crime:

Police were called to the hotel after a tip-off.

▪ alert a warning to be ready for possible danger that may happen soon:

Twelve flood alerts have been issued to areas along the River Severn.

|

a fire alert

|

The ambulance services were on red alert (=they were ready to take action immediately) .

▪ advisory formal an official warning or notice that gives information about a dangerous situation:

The air pollution gets so bad on some days that health advisories are posted at park entrances.

▪ caveat formal a warning that something may not be completely true, effective etc. Also used when pointing out that it is important to remember something:

The woman was offered treatment, but with the caveat that it had only a 30% chance of success.

|

One caveat is that you must take the goods back to the shop within 14 days.

|

There is one important caveat to this argument.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.