219 Verbs to Use for the Word noticing

Still, she took not any notice.

If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees or charges.

Nearly every boy in the school saw clearly that he was both unworthy and unfitted to fulfil the duties of a prefect, but the peculiar circumstances under which he had, as "Rats" put it, been given "notice to quit," caused a large number of his schoolfellows to side with him, and condemn the action of the captain.

The first thing which attracted my particular notice, was a profusion of oaths and imprecations, which proceeded from one of the curtained booths.

The men were not anxious to do so, their awe of the captain made them only too glad to escape his notice.

W. asked Grevy once or twice when Madame Waddington might call upon his wifeand he answered that as soon as they were quite installed I should receive a notice.

The six facsimiles numbered 9 to 15 deserve special notice.

Edward Everett, who at that time was president of Harvard College, took a great interest in the matter, and immediately opened a correspondence with the proper authorities, and sent a notice of the discovery to the "Astronomische Nachrichten.

" "Humph," muttered Fletcher senior to himself, as he turned on his heel after reading the notice, "the fat's in the fire now, and no mistake.

His brother, the grandfather of the poet, was the celebrated "Hardy Byron"; or, as the sailors called him, "Foulweather Jack," whose adventures and services are too well known to require any notice here.

Mr. Charles Ovens saw the notice.

So far back as we have any records of history, we find notices of this animal, and of its flesh being used as the food of man.

I have just written A notice for your Daughter, that she may know What is become of you.

Miss Rushford has served notice on me that she's going to tell, and dashed if I blame her.

THE ROOT AND THE STEM NOW DEMAND A SLIGHT NOTICE.

So that his acts as legislator naturally claim our first notice.

"Good-Morning, Merry Sunshine," follows, and the sun, encouraged by having some notice taken of him in this blind and stolid world, shines brighter than ever....

No sooner had the House of Commons got notice of this insult offered to one of their Members, than they immediately enacted a settled rule, which from that accident took place, with respect to privilege, and ever since that time the Members of the House have been exempt from arrests for debt.

Recently it had been felt in Lemnos and some other islands of the Aegean, yet seemingly not with such intensity as to excite much notice generally in the Grecian world: at length it passed to Athens, and first showed itself in the Piraeus.

We remember a writer who merited more notice than he actually received, for his well-considered thoughts on the behavior of Mourners,whose conduct, as a general thing, is certainly open to criticism.

And he then strove to draw up a notice to his workpeople, to inform them that the factory would remain closed until the day after the funeral.

Hundreds of cases as bad or worse than these did he discover and bring before public notice.

During his lifetime it obtained little notice save for purposes of disparagement and denunciation.

"If I simply say there is a chap called Higgins who is terribly bored and wants some notice taken of him, they won't print that sort of tosh.

As the warm days of spring came on, Ilbrahim was accustomed to remain for hours silent and inactive within hearing of the children's voices at their play; yet, with his usual delicacy of feeling, he avoided their notice, and would flee and hide himself from the smallest individual among them.

219 Verbs to Use for the Word  noticing