If you're asking what "heed my lecture" means, it means to "pay attention to my lecture"
The opposite of heed is to ignore, or to disregard.
The prefix in "heed" is "he-" and the root is "heed." The word itself means to pay attention or take notice of something.
I heed to an oath.
Definition of heed is: to give careful attention to
Both versions are correct. If you say "heed this", you are using heed as a verb. If you say "take heed", you are using heed as a noun, which accounts for the slight variation of wording. Use the one that sounds the best to you.
He did not heed my warning to turn back; he went on and was killed.
To cite lecture notes in MLA format, include the lecturer's name, the title of the lecture in quotation marks, the course name, the date of the lecture, and the location of the lecture. For example: Last name, First name. "Title of Lecture." Course Name, Date of Lecture, Location of Lecture.
No. Heed means to pay attention to or listen to. If you heed someones advice you listen to it and perhaps even pay attention to it. Ignore would be an antonym of heed. Disagree is an antonym of agree.
-Lecturing -Lectured _________ Or simply: to lecture. Lecture is a verb its forms are: lecture / lectures / lectured / lecturing
"Heed those warnings and don't go into the jungle." "Students are advised to heed the restrictions placed on their use of cell phones." "He would not heed his family's advice to return to college." " Vandals on WikiAnswers get blocked if they do not heed the warning from Supervisors." "If he heard, he paid no heed." "You should heed my advice."
Yes, heed means to pay attention to, or take notice of.
Jonas Heed was born on 1967-01-03.