Synonym: attend, care, follow, mind, notice, observe. Similar words: seed, sheet, sheer, heel, need, weed, cheer, cheek. Meaning: [hɪːd] n. paying particular notice (as to children or helpless people). v. pay close attention to; give heed to.
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(31) Women of Hollywood: Take heed!
(32) The ghost, however, paid no heed, walked through the machinery and disappeared through a wall.
(33) Non-performers were supposed to stay out, but as far as she could tell nobody paid the rule much heed.
(34) Shaikhs were representatives: bound to hear and to heed, bound to persuade rather than to command.
(35) The advice to drivers is to slow down and take heed of the warning signals.
(36) In formulating our recommendations we have taken heed of the point that development in the four language modes is complex and non-linear.
(37) Also known as a boogeyman or bogeyman, one can only have an effect if its victim pays heed to it.
(38) I didn't pay them no heed at the time, because in this town somebody is always looking for somebody.
(39) A major complaint voiced by the physicians was that patients did not heed the medical advice of the staff.
(40) She would heed their call and they would immediately retreat into sudden apathy.
(41) It was often imitated, even to his face, but he paid no heed whatever.
(42) This government - any government - would do well to heed those dangers.
(43) I hope you pay heed, you're still my favourite tome by miles ... for now.
(44) Thereafter he took heed from being dropped once or twice, and soon established a permanent place in the team.
(45) Will New York's taxi-drivers, known everywhere for their direct approach, heed this message?
(46) But they said the organized process of the advisory council w ill create political pressure for the supervisors to heed the recommendations.
(46) Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
(47) In groping for useful precedents, one could do worse than heed the tale of a man named Sherwood Rowland.
(48) Motherwell failed to heed the warning, and paid the penalty.
(49) I will pay heed and eventually the veil will lift.
(50) The judge said the father had failed to heed warnings about the relationship.
(51) Try to neutralise these tendencies by taking heed of your owner's complaints, or you may finish up the underdog.
(52) Reaction to the signs varies, with some applauding the idea and others saying that few will take heed.
(53) Will Hollywood heed the growing cry for less violence in movies?
(54) In this instance the gunner must have failed to heed the warning with his upper-rear turret.
(55) What you say out of it they will not heed.
(56) The bold but foolish boy was too exhausted to pay heed, though, and so stayed in the hut.
(57) Thereafter, the government's refusal to heed criticism in the press and in the Duma became increasingly intransigent.
(58) The animals which fought there gave little heed to defence; they massed around them and tried to engulf them.
(59) Nevertheless, he had to give heed to the more practical side of transportation.
(60) Convincing the powers-that-be to pay political heed to the needs of poor women and women of color was another.
More similar words: seed, sheet, sheer, heel, need, weed, cheer, cheek, speed, breed, cheesy, cheese, weed out, needle, speed up, indeed, exceed, feed on, cheer up, in the end, proceed, cheerful, feedback, at the end of, by the end of, succeed in, wheelchair, in the event of, speedometer, at full speed.