N: a warning or proviso of specific stipulations, conditions or limitations.
L. literally "let a person beware." Not that you care.
God gave the children of Israel a caveat not to touch the ark.
Paul delivered a caveat which warned that having partial judgment will incur us to God's wrath.
Bonnie & Clyde (right) imply the caveat that they will shoot.
I think Bonnie & Clyde are stylish.
Tim dropped the caveat on Ben that we might not go to his game because of my birthday.
Meredith isn't really aggressive enough to give caveats.
"Caveat: Do not try this at home."
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This blog is getting a little too cool for me to handle. My caveat is if this keeps up, my head might explode.
ReplyDeleteNebuchadnezzar's dream about the tree was a caveat to humble himself.
It is widely misunderstood that Matthew 24 is a caveat of the world's end rather than the destruction of Jerusalem.
A caveat: caviar is fish eggs.
another caveat: i'm coming to Florida soon!
God doesn't indulge us with visual caveats anymore. His word is sufficient.
you're better at sentences than i am. you are good at making different forms of sentences, whereas i just get one formula and tend to stick with it.
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