watch out, take care or pay attention.
Take Heed Mr. Tojo was created in 1943.
To take the advice given to you, if someone says to heed the advice given by other it means take the advice other people give you
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.
Yes, heed means to pay attention to, or take notice of.
The prefix in "heed" is "he-" and the root is "heed." The word itself means to pay attention or take notice of something.
be careful
"Take heed to your own words" means to carefully consider and be mindful of the words you choose to speak, as they have the power to impact others and your own reputation. It serves as a reminder to think before speaking and to be aware of the consequences of what you say.
The homophone of "he'd" is "heed," which means to pay attention to or take notice of something.
Not really. 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.
To heed is to pay very close, careful, attention, to another. Also, to take notice of such of this individual. To heed a brother Masonic is to notice and pay very close attention to him, his beliefs, life, and actions.
The best thing is to not take any of his/her statements seriously. Ignore them at best. If you pay much heed to it will be your loss only.
it's heed, and it means pay attention to.