How To Use Heed In A Sentence

  • We could have stalled the ruination of thousands of small production units if we had paid heed to the plea of a level-playing field.
  • These tracts heed the critical strictures against both love and wit.
  • The voice was wheedling, half chanting, with a sickish thrill in it. DOLL'S EYES
  • He wheedles that he was in Japan when it happened.
  • The newspapers were spread out over the big worktable under the windows, heedless of the smudging printers ' ink. DEATH IN FASHION
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  • We had many family quarrels about it, and they began in time to grow up to a dangerous height; for as I was quite estranged form my husband (as he was called) in affection, so I took no heed to my words, but sometimes gave him language that was provoking; and, in short, strove all I could to bring him to a parting with me, which was what above all things in the world I desired most. Moll Flanders
  • To get this project moving, central government needs to heed his exhortations. Times, Sunday Times
  • They moved with a heedlessness and dreamlike courage towards the doom they had so assiduously courted.
  • To get this project moving, central government needs to heed his exhortations. Times, Sunday Times
  • This has made it all the more difficult to accept what they claim is the refusal of staff to heed their advice. Times, Sunday Times
  • Those opposed to the application will cry foul, and those who have an axe to grind will jump on the bandwagon, heedless of the merits and demerits of the scheme.
  • I tried to study her face for some trace of the winning girl I'd known, but there was nothing left in either her drained appearance or her wheedling manner. Intervals
  • In puzzle mode that initially just means activating them slowly enough not to cause collisions, but later levels demand deeper experimentation with order and timing before you wheedle out a viable solution. This week's new games
  • Absent, none taketh heed to him or his concerns; Present, he hath no part in life or pleasance aye. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • He ought to heed the advice of friends and family by enjoying a long and happy retirement. The Sun
  • But there is a certain ridicule, among superficial people, thrown on the scholars or clerisy, which is of no import, unless the scholar heed it. Representative Man (1850)
  • Also, don't hesitate to contact Jane Wheedle at 06 - 5912 - 7384 if you have urgent business.
  • He went about his work, unheedful of the jests, ungalled by his irons, unmindful of the groans and laughter about him.
  • But when it comes to the greatest field game in the world, the Meath lads don't pass much heed.
  • But the government should heed them. Times, Sunday Times
  • A religious person thus may be unheedful of a higher morality or civic sense, or may not even sense the morality involved in the situation.
  • Commerce requires governance by politics, art, culture, and nature: to slow it down, to make it heedful, to make it pay attention to people and place.
  • As determined by the sampling within this study, the top five are Raytheon, Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, and ITT.
  • ” Of all forms of indiscriminate almsgiving, that is the most offensive and most worthless, and they knew it, or they would not have sent me a wheedling invitation to come and inspect their “relief work, ” offering to have a carriage take me around. Roosevelt comes—Mulberry Street’s Golden Age
  • The legend of Mata Hari is, for sure, the most enduring image of the female spy - the vamp who wheedles state secrets out of men by her seductive charms.
  • zone_info": "huffpost. politics/blog; politics = 1; nickname = frida-berrigan; entry_id = 220200; boeing = 1; cybersecurity = 1; cyberwar = 1; lockheed-martin = 1; northrop-grumman = 1; pentagon = 1; raytheon = 1", Frida Berrigan: Its Official! Pentagon Cyber Command Gets Ready to "Stand Up"
  • Growing cities, overuse of fertilizers, and factories that heedlessly dump wastewater have degraded China's water supplies to the extent that half the nation's rivers and lakes are severely polluted.
  • It sure didn't take new Portland coach Mo Cheeks long to pick up the company line on resident cuckoo Rasheed Wallace.
  • I for a long time, but at last I awoke from my heedlessness and, returning to my senses, I found my wealth had become unwealth and my condition ill-conditioned and all I once hent had left my hand. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • A billowing fog of chill air poured out of the door and swirled around Cane's arms and legs as he heedlessly strode forward.
  • But Shaheed was staring at a maidan in which lady doctors were being bayoneted before they were raped, and raped again before they were shot. G. Roger Denson: The Beauty We Fear: The Mosques of Secular Muslim Writers
  • With petrol prices low, it is highly unlikely he will heed their call, but also doubtful he will increase the tax after four years of freezes. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Democrats will still be expected to pay heed to national unity by clapping politely. Times, Sunday Times
  • May this book be widely read and may millions heed its warnings and act upon its advice. The Residue Report - an action plan for safer food
  • She didn't heed my warning.
  • When adult sunbathers appear not to be heeding the warnings, campaigners go for a softer target - their kids.
  • It appears that Rasheed has a history of criticising the Maldivan state religion in his writing - it is a legal requirement for citizens of the Maldives to be Muslims - and he has since written to Amnesty International to request help in seeking temporary asylum. New Humanist Blog
  • But the government should heed them. Times, Sunday Times
  • He would then in return at a later date with at least one accomplice -- in at least some cases believed to have been Gary or Shaheed -- and a large amount of counterfeit coins encased in an intricate wrapping, Bianchi said. CourierPostOnline.com - News
  • he spends without heed to the consequences
  • Mansfield†™ s lecture is a reading from the first chapter of his book, which argues that manliness†"what he defines as sexual rapacity, an appetite for war, a general bull-in-a-china-shop heedlessnessâ€" is preferable to the namby-pamby faggotistical mores being pressed on us by radical feminism and the castratory mandates of late capitalism / twenty-first-century bureaucratic culture. Harper's Magazine
  • Meanwhile, many Western tourists hurried to leave the country, heeding warnings from their own governments that it was not safe to stay.
  • They were harridans, engaged in a harangue of hermeneutics, harpooning his hyperbolic sense of hagiocracy, calling him a haggard hooligan hamming up a heedless hegemonic hullabaloo. Martin Marks: Bushenschadenfreude: Where has it all Gone?
  • I snickered, giggled and tee-heed all the way through.
  • Dr. Nair wheedled, and often pricked, the group to bring out their concerns and knowledge about the needs and demands of adolescence.
  • When she rocks in its cradle the babe the young parents intrust to her heed; when she calls the kine to the milking, the chicks to their corn; when she but flits through my room to renew the flowers on the stand, or range in neat order the books that I read, no spell on her fancy could lead her a step from the range of her provident cares! A Strange Story — Volume 07
  • Some were so disorientated that they ran down the tracks into tunnels, heedless of the danger from oncoming trains, their only instinct to get out.
  • If, through thought and contemplation, we become heedful of the dangers it poses, we can feel motivated to overcome it. Freedom from Fear by Thanissaro Bhikkhu
  • That 's lovely, Tom," and Polly found it so touching that she felt for her handkerchief; but Tom took it away, and made her laugh instead of cry, by saying, in a wheedlesome tone, – An Old-Fashioned Girl
  • The counsel therefore by President Mwanawasa on the need for envoys to be above board and avoid being caught up in a web of scandals is valid and should be paid heed to.
  • In a fit of phrensical heedlessness, I sent a letter to my beloved Miss Howe, without recollecting her private address; and it has fallen into her angry mother’s hands: and so that dear friend perhaps has anew incurred displeasure on my account. Clarissa Harlowe
  • Cheedale has its usual crop of new additions.
  • Some did not heed the warning. Times, Sunday Times
  • We do all the talking; we plead, wheedle, deny and cajole.
  • Naples was altogether different, but even here it must be admitted that her conception of deserving people was not at all that set forth in those novels of Dostoievski which Albertine had taken from my shelves and devoured, that is to say in the guise of wheedling parasites, thieves, drunkards, at one moment stupid, at another insolent, debauchees, at a pinch murderers. The Captive
  • In conjunction with Lockheed Martin, Lakota and other participating small businesses are working on Defense Department-funded programs under the Small Business Innovation Research program.
  • Justified criticisms of facilities in the general enclosure have also been heeded. Times, Sunday Times
  • I found myself rooting for Tamara to reconnect in the deepest way with handsome Andy, her childhood friend — Luke Evans makes him a son of the soil who would have had Hardy's vote — and I was shocked by her home-wrecking exploits with a fatuous scrivener, though her heedlessness is exactly the point. A Grownup Look at Lennon as a 'Boy'
  • Noticing that there was little meat on the sucker and heeding the cook's warning that the sinew was pretty tough, I passed.
  • The possibility that his words may be heeded was suggested by the church's decision in 2000 to canonize six men who had signed the letters.
  • The scripture is faithful in relating the faults even of those whom it most applauds, which is an instance of the sincerity of the penmen, and an evidence that it was not written to serve any party: and even such stories as these "were written for our learning," that "he that thinks he stands may take heed lest he fall," and that others 'harms may be our warnings. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume II (Joshua to Esther)
  • Though far remote from the ivy chaplet on Wisdom's glorious brow, yet his stump of withered birch inculcates a lesson of virtue, by reminding us, that we should take heed to our steps in our journeyings through the wilderness of life; and, so far as in him lies, he helps us to do so, and by the exercise of a very catholic faith, looks for his reward to the value he supposes us to entertain for that virtue which, from time immemorial, has been in popular parlance classed as next to godliness. Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 437 Volume 17, New Series, May 15, 1852
  • But there were many cloistered Christians who studied the bible undisturbed by these shadows and doubts, and who, heedless of patristical lore and saintly wisdom, devoured the spiritual food in its pure and uncontaminating simplicity -- such students, humble, patient, devoted, will be found crowding the monastic annals, and yielding good evidence of the same by the holy tenor of their sinless lives, their Christian charity and love. Bibliomania in the Middle Ages
  • In its isolation the island has been as unheedful of tourists as it has been unspoiled.
  • He had been unrelenting with his plan and given no heed to the young lieutenant he had talked to.
  • By effort and heedfulness, discipline and self-mastery, let the wise one make for himself an island which no flood can overwhelm.
  • It would do well to heed the same advice. Times, Sunday Times
  • To get this project moving, central government needs to heed his exhortations. Times, Sunday Times
  • Upon this threshold of a wild scene of death they, in short, defied the proportion of events with that splendor of heedlessness which belongs only to veterans. The Little Regiment
  • The next morning they were released with a warning, and it's clear that at least for now, they are heeding that warning.
  • Some ca 'the pleugh, some herd, some tentie rin [drive, heedful run] Robert Burns How To Know Him
  • He wheedles his harmonica - a horrible sound.
  • Many years earlier Teiresias had warned the Theban king Oedipus that he was guilty of incest and patricide, but Oedipus had heeded his warning too late.
  • The Mayor, not heeding his cue, began his speech early and failed to mention the conference and exhibition sponsors.
  • Whilst making a desperate rush after one, cap in hand, and all too unheedful of the obstacles lying in my path, I struck the toes of my bootless left foot against a thin slab of earthfast stone, which stood edge-on and straight up.
  • He has to make it plain to them, and afterwards to the wider party, that he will heed the call if summoned. Times, Sunday Times
  • Isabella tried a softer approach, wheedling like a turkey whisperer. At Hidden Falls
  • I don't want to win the support of the Conservative group in the parliament in a wheedling, ingratiating or deal-making way, but because my colleagues acknowledge that I'm the best to lead that group.
  • Heedless of time or any other consideration, they began to search the underwater cave.
  • You view your employer more as an equal and you begin to think of ways that you can add value to your services instead of thinking of ways to wheedle more benefits from your feudal overlord.
  • It seems those requests have gone virtually unheeded in subsequent years, since hard, shredded bodies have been rewarded with top spots in the lineup.
  • There were not a few who saw things blackly in this respectand flayed the planlessness and heedlessness of the Reich's policies, andwell recognized their inner weakness and hollowness but these were onlyoutsiders in political life; the official government authorities passedby the observations of a Houston Stewart Chamberlain with the same indifferenceas still occurs today. Mein Kampf
  • Senator John Kerry has called for a filibuster of the Alito nomination, heeding your calls to do everything possible to defeat it. The Courts
  • So the kings said that they would give him all things soever that he desired, and therewith was a great army got ready, and all things wrought in the most heedful wise, ships and all war-gear, so that his journey might be of the stateliest: but Sigurd himself steered the dragon-keel which was the greatest and noblest; richly wrought were their sails, and glorious to look on. The Story of the Volsungs
  • Research shows that people who don't pay heed to their feed tend to eat more. Times, Sunday Times
  • Take heed and you will surely speed.
  • I'm happy that you heeded my comments, but they're only the results of lots of experience and some basic common sense, not deep cerebration.
  • He must needs cut the beast with his rod, and so managed to hit White Posy, who starts aside, and Cis, sitting unheedfully on that new-fangled French saddle, was thrown in an instant. Unknown to History: a story of the captivity of Mary of Scotland
  • But the service clearly does not heed its own advice. The Sun
  • A platform of kinetic cut-and-paste electronica is enriched by waves of horns and choral voices, relentless bass patterns, darting guitars, crisp percussion, jolting changes in meter and Thom Yorke's wheedling vocals sung often without chordal support. Lucinda Williams Snarls, Mary J. Blige Thrills
  • Khan, (the Khasmahul's son-in-law,) and others of equal rank, all in loud terms admonished the assailants, and demanded the surrender of the children, but all were alike unheeded. A Journey through the Kingdom of Oude, Volumes I & II
  • In the extremely price-sensitive furniture industry, customers are typically wheedled into opening their wallets during ‘one day only!’
  • heedless of the child's crying
  • Image: Working on a large scale, Lockheed's airdock in Akron, Ohio. Sustainable: Solar
  • There's lots to try if you're feeling a little more heedless, though.
  • Vibrations and failure to heed the warnings by the contractor resulted in the loss of the STS-4 (IIRC) boosters when the main parachute deck fitting separation explosive bolts inadvertantly fired prematurely when the linear shaped charge used to separate the frustum (nose cone) from the booster fired and generated vibes that the decelerometers sensed as water-impact ... at 10,000 ft.! More Ares Woes - NASA Watch
  • But now women are being urged to heed aches, pains and persistent bloating that could be warning signs of the onset of ovarian cancer. Times, Sunday Times
  • She never heeded anyone's warning.
  • Catholics of this persuasion," Sheed writes, "agonized more over their own bourgeoisification than over any outside danger. Catholics
  • It's fine to celebrate success but it is more important to heed the lessons of failure.
  • But anger is still simmering, and policymakers would be wise to heed it.
  • Many of them command such skills as cajoling, wheedling, thundering, condescending, and even insulting - but, of course, insulting with style.
  • Patty's wheedlesome air won them all, and they took away the highly-spiced, and strongly-flavoured dish. Patty Blossom
  • They failed to heed a warning about the dangerous currents in the river.
  • The victim's grief-stricken aunt said other teenagers should take heed of the accident and not treat trial bikes as toys.
  • They must tread ever forward, regardless of discomfort, heedless of exhaustion.
  • Then St. Lusson (a sword in one hand and "crumbling turf in the other") cried to his French followers who applauded his sentences, to the savages who could not understand, to the rapids which would not heed, and to the forests which have long forgotten the vibrations of his voice, the words in French to which these words in English correspond: The French in the Heart of America
  • And like all successful prophets he would be heeded by the rich and the powerful, even if their own churches warned against foretelling the future.
  • Colombo - Maldivan President Mohamed Nasheed reappointed his cabinet of ministers WN.com - Articles related to Boost in the Tourism sector will help offset other revenue losses
  • The US Navy (USN) has conducted the 120th consecutive test launch of a Lockheed Martin Trident II D5 Fleet Ballistic Missile (FBM).
  • Designed around technology imported from Nubia and elsewhere, the Royal Starship's unique spaceframe was crafted at Theed.
  • When Cocky, balanced on one leg, the other leg in the air as the foot of it held the scruff of Michael's neck, leaned to Michael's ear and wheedled, Michael could only lay down silkily the bristly hair-waves of his neck, and with silly half-idiotic eyes of bliss agree to whatever was Cocky's will or whimsey so delivered. CHAPTER XI
  • These people involved in these antinatural and antihuman activities; may not heed and follow Gita as they are not in a position to listen and understand. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • The short line market will still shake under the even line adhesion tendency, the investor is not suitable acts heedlessly .
  • Orders were given to bar the door against the convict gang who had come to discharge their unpleasant duty, and while all were busy decking out the unconscious corpse in gayest attire, none paid any heed to me bending over the fire with the motherless child, journeying fast to join its dead parent. Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands
  • Whence this peculiar congeries of views, advanced with supreme self-confidence and heedless inattention to fact?
  • The union failed to heed warnings that strike action would lead to the closure of the factory.
  • If we heeded all the hype, accidents would be eliminated, yet this involves too much speculation and guesswork.
  • And the Jersey driver remains a prominent folk devil all over the Northeast: bumptious, heedless, hostile and barely competent.
  • It was a lesson which subsequent governments did not always heed. The British way in Warfare - 1688-2000
  • If she had only heeded my warnings , none of this would have happened.
  • Her warning went unheeded .
  • Given that new regulations are unlikely to arrive soon, it's wise to heed all the advice you can. Times, Sunday Times
  • This has made it all the more difficult to accept what they claim is the refusal of staff to heed their advice. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then he spake to Piraeus, his trusty companion: ‘Piraeus, son of Clytius, thou that at other seasons hearkenest to me above all my company who went with me to Pylos, even now, I pray, lead this stranger home with thee, and give heed to treat him lovingly and with worship in thy house till I come. Book XV
  • Thousands of Iranians gathered in several locations across Tehran Monday, heeding calls in recent days by opposition leaders to demonstrate in solidarity with Egyptian and Tunisian protesters. Tehran Beats Back New Protests
  • Deliberately provoke your adversary. Find something that makes them angry and keep wheedling away on this point until they lose their temper and so the argument.
  • The airline has been criticized for failing to heed advice/warnings about lack of safety routines.
  • I knew by your wheedling tone that you wanted something from me.
  • It's fine to celebrate success but it is more important to heed the lessons of failure.
  • This is the true philosophy of most of what is called heedlessness in children, and for which, poor things, they receive so many harsh reprimands and so much punishment. Gentle Measures in the Management and Training of the Young Or, the Principles on Which a Firm Parental Authority May Be Established and Maintained, Without Violence or Anger, and the Right Development of the Moral and Mental Capacities Be Promoted by Met
  • Nevertheless, he had to give heed to the more practical side of transportation.
  • ever, there was an effort to raise funds for civil rights campaigns, Duane managed to wheedle a four-figure check from his mother. THREE KINDS OF KISSING - SCOTTISH SHORT STORIES
  • He was repeatedly astonished to find those around Him heedless of the air which He drew in with open mouth, blind to what He saw, deaf to what He heard, unelated by His joy. Thoughts on religion at the front
  • Another intoxicant is “Sabzi,” dried hemp-leaves, poppy-seed, cucumber heed, black pepper and cardamoms rubbed down in a mortar with a wooden pestle, and made drinkable by adding milk, ice-cream, etc. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • And although your Lordship will doubtless proceed, I must warn you through my experience of European affairs, heedfully, that the reasons that operate in this small presidio, which is surrounded by barbarians and hostile nations, have no place in populous cities. The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 25 of 55 1635-36 Explorations by Early Navigators, Descriptions of the Islands and Their Peoples, Their History and Records of the Catholic Missions, As Related in Contemporaneous Books and Manuscripts, Showing t
  • Heedless of time or any other consideration, they began to search the underwater cave.
  • One or both of them might try to wheedle out of it if she left them a loophole. HARSHINI
  • However, Lockheed Martin will invest $ 344 million for a 20 percent stake in Loral Space.
  • Her dwarfish spouse still smoked his cigar and drank his rum without heeding her.
  • The test, conducted by the Missile Defense Agency and Lockheed Martin, (NYSE: LMT) THAAD prime contractor and system integrator, occurred at the Pacific Missile Range Facility in Hawaii June 29, 2010.
  • Had the administration paid heed to public opinion, not out of slavish deference but out of respect, we would've seen a different tax cut, and, with any luck, a sustainable popular majority for conservatism.
  • But his uninhibitedness also takes the form of sheer stylistic bravura, the dazzling facility, note-spinning mastery and heedless creative enthusiasm of the Russian.
  • On foreign takeovers, she would do well to heed their concerns. The Sun
  • The old man wheedled the secret out of the innocent girl.
  • Will the council pay any heed? The Times Literary Supplement
  • I'm not qualified to comment on whether your claim that "in the usual public choice view, the voters are right but ignored; in the Mises-Bastiat view, the voters are wrong, but heeded" is a fair summary of the contending schools of thought. Ed Stringham Won Us $25,000!, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • In this business he proceeds very heedfully, like a treasure-hunter in some old house, sounding the walls to find where the gold is masoned in. Moby Dick; or the Whale
  • An agreed portion of verbal flirtation might be deemed lubricious, to which neither party should pay any heed. Times, Sunday Times
  • I thank God that I heeded my wife's call to attend our church's vigil in Ebute Meta.
  • He has the loose-jointed movements of an athlete, and a brisk heedlessness as he crushes raw sugar into a splash of coffee.
  • No matter, the message that the royal meeting has a welcome mat for overseas runners is increasingly being heeded. Times, Sunday Times
  • He, who was sheer bladed steel in the imperious flashing of his will, could swashbuckle and bully like any over-seas roisterer, or wheedle as wickedly winningly as the first woman out of Eden or the last woman of that descent. CHAPTER XI
  • This was a shop that time had forgotten, that carried on regardless, heedless that the world was changing outside.
  • To this end civility is indispensable, heedless of whether we reject their integrationist aspirations. Times, Sunday Times
  • To get this project moving, central government needs to heed his exhortations. Times, Sunday Times
  • She said her mother-in-law's requests to have the dressing on her foot changed went unheeded for four days, when it should have been done daily.
  • During all of this editorial project - all the boasting, praising, cajoling, and wheedling, indulging in witty asides - I've been staring fixedly into a computer screen.
  • And with all attention directed towards the death-struggle just up the road, no one was paying the least heed to the big Kabuli badmash scratching himself furtively outside the Commander-in-Chief's funkhole. Flashman And The Mountain Of Light
  • But take heed withal, lest that whilst thou dust settle thy contentment in things present, thou grow in time so to overprize them, as that the want of them (whensoever it shall so fall out) should be a trouble and a vexation unto thee. Meditations
  • It found that 90 childcare referrals were left unheeded for months, despite the serious nature of many allegations.
  • Vicious, razor-edged rocks sliced into the pads of his feet, however he paid them no heed as he stalked away, his back straight with confidence and resolution.
  • He is at the same time bullying and wheedling, but will, when cornered, reiterate the anodyne phrases he picked up on the intensive salesman's course.
  • crissa, no, what we've learned time and again is that people who don't build and pay tier and make up the bulk of the population can scream as loud as they want, but they can't get heard of heeded, and tiny cabals of coders can whisper in the Lindens' ear, and they win. Bye Bye Megaprims - SLOG
  • Little heed is taken of the overstocking of the markets, till at last they are flooded with commodities. What Communities Lose by the Competitive System
  • Maybe people should heed the advice of a photographer I used to know. Times, Sunday Times
  • I put the key back into my pocket and backed out of the parking spot I was in, and sped out of the lot, unheeding but aware of the envious stares.
  • The airline has been criticized for failing to heed advice/warnings about lack of safety routines.
  • It shows the cops do heed public comment and act on issues.
  • She wheedled her husband into buying a lottery ticket.
  • Lockheed Martin will hold a 20 percent equity stake in Loral Space.
  • Heedless of time or any other consideration, they began to search the underwater cave.
  • The Council would have to be extraordinarily inept if it were not to take heed of this overwhelming reaction to the move.
  • We pay them too much heed and now we are letting them control the one team that matter to us all. Times, Sunday Times
  • They swarm in squalling packs on to the roads, heedless of the rush-hour traffic, defying drivers to confront their pig-headed rebellion against road safety.
  • When he realized his long-held aspiration of becoming a writer by masterfully crafting eight gay characters in his play, which was initially produced off-Broadway by the cutting-edge Playwrights Unit, no one was more surprised than Mart Crowley himself -- who heeded and simultaneously took on the powerful, straight New York theater critic, Stanley Kauffmann of the New York Times. Penelope Andrew: Gay Icons and American Dreams in New Documentary: Making the Boys
  • The initial symptoms of acute mountain sickness are warning signs to be heeded carefully.
  • Maybe people should heed the advice of a photographer I used to know. Times, Sunday Times
  • They seemed abler bargainers than the men, and the play of expression on their dramatic and intensely feminine faces as they wheedled the price of a calf out of a fierce hillsman, or haggled over a heap of dates that In Morocco
  • It would pain him to heed her advice. Times, Sunday Times
  • Is that what's going on with Portland's current program (in which the contractor is an outfit called ACS State and Local Solutions, formerly known as Lockheed Martin IMS)? Speaking of those red-light cameras... (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • They would be wise to heed his advice. Times, Sunday Times
  • And, by and large, as we have driven around today, people seem to be heeding that warning.
  • Mr. Tickels writhed beneath the sarcasm, and turned deadly pale, although he and his tormentor were the only persons present who comprehended the secret meaning of the words -- for Fanny was too much engrossed in conversation with Argyle, to heed the remark. Venus in Boston; A Romance of City Life
  • Then to make the sight perfect, these things are needful, that is to wit, the cause efficient, the limb of the eye convenient to the thing that shall be seen, the air that bringeth the likeness to the eye, and taking heed, and easy moving. Mediaeval Lore from Bartholomew Anglicus
  • There was a certain frankness about him that pleased, and though he might be spendthrift and heedless, and colossally selfish, Richard felt a genuine affection for him. The Black Moth: A Romance of the XVIII Century
  • In his view of history, other developing countries heeded the "Washington Consensus" to dismantle every possible restraint on markets—and "ended up in economic collapse and long-term stagnation. Emerging Questions on Growth Path
  • Whatever is shaping your story, must take heed of the Charles Darwin rule.
  • Mr. Rasheed, slowed, waved at the attendant stationed in the guardhouse. Father's day
  • November 12, 2008 at 3:17 pm yeh, adn mi sonz a tinder fut scout who wud b a sekkund class f heed pass teh watur test, so i guess heez gawt alotta cat in him..lol….massteur eagul..yeh i wuz lurkin lasnite an saw u sed dat Basement cat - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • In a great river great fish are found; but take heed lest you be drowned. 
  • Asia has always had its environmental activists, but often they have struggled without recognition against an unheeding system.
  • We pay them too much heed and now we are letting them control the one team that matter to us all. Times, Sunday Times
  • He started to yell Jo-Beth's name as soon as he came within what he guessed was hailing distance, but his call went unheeded. THE GREAT AND SECRET SHOW
  • Take heed from the name of my column. Times, Sunday Times
  • (In one recent case, the Social Security payment to a person on disability was garnisheed.) Apollo's Daughter :: Recession Discussion
  • And dread thee nothing of this barbarian, but command that we both two be called tofore thee, and take heed what shall be said between us both softly, for I shall so refrain him that he shall no more dare demand such thing. The Golden Legend, vol. 5
  • Therefore take heed how you impawn our person, [9] King Henry the Fifth Arranged for Representation at the Princess's Theatre
  • Anything more wheedlesome than that touching appeal was seldom heard, but Jo quenched ` her boy 'by turning on him with a stern query, "How many bouquets have you sent Miss Randal this week? Little Women
  • The union failed to heed warnings that strike action would lead to the closure of the factory.

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