0 a warning to consider something before taking any more action, or a statement that limits a more general statement:
1 a warning, for example about the use or effectiveness of something:
One caveat: Know when passengers must be back on board the plane.
2 a warning to consider something before doing anything more:
One caveat: while the plans can offer an opportunity to accumulate significant wealth over time, they cannot guarantee the safety of employee contributions.
3 a statement that limits a more general statement:
Behind every set of statistics there's always a caveat.
The introduction sets out the background and methodology of the research and repeats some of the important caveats about qualitative attitude research.
We will review herein some of the evidence and the caveats surrounding the neurodevelopmental hypothesis.
Unlike natural kind terms, the reference of colour terms is determined by observation, with the caveat that this be under normal conditions.
Bearing this caveat in mind, the computed results are compared here to the available, unconditioned fluctuation statistics that have been measured.
Another caveat is the question of the safety of life during relativistic future-directed time travel.
That was when there weren't so many caveats as in our earlier statements.
Even with this caveat, the play's final scene went a long way towards extracting an ethical response from the audience.
There is a caveat to this conclusion, however, since the long-term effects of institutions are not directly estimated through the pooled time-series design.
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