notice

  • 31notice — / nəυtɪs/ noun 1. a piece of written information ● The company secretary pinned up a notice about the pension scheme. 2. an official warning that a contract is going to end or that terms are going to be changed ♦ until further notice until… …

    Dictionary of banking and finance

  • 32NOTICE — s. f. Livre, traité où l on donne une connaissance particulière des dignités, des charges, des lieux, des chemins d un royaume, d une province, d un pays. La notice de l Empire. La notice des Gaules.   Il signifie aussi, Indication ou extrait… …

    Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 7eme edition (1835)

  • 33notice — Synonyms and related words: account, acknowledge, acquaintance, admonish, admonishment, admonition, advert, advertence, advertency, advice, advise, alarm, alertness, allude, analysis, animadvert, announce, announcement, annunciation, apperception …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 34notice — {{11}}notice (n.) early 15c., information, intelligence, from M.Fr. notice (14c.), and directly from L. notitia a being known, celebrity, fame, knowledge, from notus known, pp. of (g)noscere come to know, to get to know, get acquainted (with),… …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 35notice — 1. noun 1) nothing escaped his notice Syn: attention, observation, awareness, consciousness, perception; regard, consideration, scrutiny; watchfulness, vigilance, attentiveness 2) a notice on the wall Syn …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 36notice — / nəυtɪs/ noun 1. an official warning that a contract is going to end or that terms are going to be changed ♦ until further notice until different instructions are given ● You must pay £200 on the 30th of each month until further notice. 2. the… …

    Marketing dictionary in english

  • 37notice — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French, knowledge, notification, from Latin notitia acquaintance, awareness, from notus known, from past participle of noscere to come to know more at know Date: 15th century 1. a. (1) warning or… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 38notice — 1. noun /ˈnəʊtɪs,ˈnoʊtɪs/ a) The act of observing; perception. He took no notice of the changes, and went on as though nothing had happened. b) A written or printed announcement. Shall we post a notice about the new policy? 2 …

    Wiktionary

  • 39notice — [15] One of the main Latin verbs for ‘know’ was nōscere (earlier gnōscere), a distant relative of English know and, via the derived cognōscere, source of a wide range of English words, from cognizance to reconnaissance. From its past participle… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 40notice — noun 1》 the fact of observing or paying attention to something. 2》 advance notification or warning.     ↘a formal declaration of one s intention to end an agreement, typically one concerning employment or tenancy, at a specified time. 3》 a… …

    English new terms dictionary