[
US
/bɪˈwɛɹ/
]
[ UK /bɪwˈeə/ ]
[ UK /bɪwˈeə/ ]
VERB
-
be on one's guard; be cautious or wary about; be alert to
Beware of telephone salesmen
How To Use beware In A Sentence
- Beware of a crafty person who undermines your achievement at work.
- We must beware of the danger of confusing what is passionately and deeply wanted with what is a right.
- The phrase "inspired by a true story" affixes itself to novels like a warning label: Beware sententious moralizing. Cheeshahteaumauk, Class of '65 (1665)
- You start in the catacombs but beware ghostly ghouls at every turn!
- Beware of telling any one of our existence; or we must fly this land.
- And shipmen see this and beware that they be not overset unwarily with tempest and with storms. A WMAM too tired for catchy titles
- Beware: all suffer their fair share of juddery, poorly pixelated footage. Times, Sunday Times
- But they have to beware of spilling secrets in front of their old comrades.
- The creeps are more likely to hang around waiting for unsuspecting victims in touristy zones like the Zona Rosa, so beware. Mexico City: Biggest city guide for the savvy traveler
- Jean-Claude Trichet hard line that the ECB collateral rules are graved in stone, therefore beware of downgrades in Greece, Spain, and Latvia. Lawrence G. McDonald: Weekly Market Wrap From Inside Wall Street