caveatin a sentence
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The good news comes with these caveats.
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And yet the literature was filled with ominous caveats.† (source)
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All those caveats noted, the case for investing in girls' education is still very, very strong.† (source)
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She was a grown woman with seven children, but this was the first time in her life that she was, without question or caveat, the one in charge.† (source)
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Exhausted by her persistence, Louie finally agreed to go, with one caveat: When Graham said, "Every head bowed, every eye closed," they were leaving.† (source)
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Okay ....but one caveat.† (source)
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Here's the caveat: seeing and blindness are generally at issue in many works, even where there is no hint of blindness on the part of windows, alleys, horses, speculations, or persons.† (source)
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Even the caveats didn't scare me much.† (source)
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The only caveat was that she'd have to come to me every two years as the results of the spell began to fade.† (source)
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Here is the first caveat.† (source)
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The only caveat was Hunter.† (source)
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But the annoying caveat was that any A Group prisoner found sharing his newspaper with a non-A Group prisoner would lose his newspaper privileges.† (source)
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Yes, the Caveat.† (source)
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Rhett suggested "Caveat Emptorium," assuring her that it would be a title most in keeping with the type of goods sold in the store.† (source)
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Now, the second caveat is relaxation.† (source)
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The same caveat lies against the work of the later makers of dictionaries; they have gone ahead of common usage in the matter of orthography, but they have hung back in the far more important matter of vocabulary, and have neglected the most important matter of idiom altogether.† (source)
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