0 to pay attention to something, especially advice or a warning: --
Voters are dissatisfied, and Congress should take heed (= consider this).
I am pleased to note that my request for greater flexibility within the second pillar was also heeded.
All government officials are constantly reminded that ptnghuà should be used for all high-profile public events, although there is anecdotal evidence suggesting that this reminder is not always heeded.
The obvious advantage of this approach is that the information it provides is more likely to be heeded by teachers because it addresses issues they themselves have identified as important.
Is it true that in ever y legal system, ever yone's preference for heeding some set of authorities would change if it were supposed that almost ever yone acted differently?
The suggestion, however, was not heeded.
The team decided that we risked not being able to offer the programme at all unless we heeded the wishes of a substantial portion of the community.
If such a distinction is considered too harsh, there is no remedy but to describe as precisely as possible the constituent parts, heeding the genealogy of the conceptual domain involved.
They occur very quickly, so much so that intermediate products of processing are not heeded in short-term memory and, thus, not available for self-report.