The AI-powered English dictionary
third-person singular simple present warns, present participle warning, simple past and past participle warned
(transitive) To make (someone) aware of (something impending); especially:
(transitive) To make (someone) aware of impending danger, evil, etc. examples
(transitive) To notify or inform (someone, about something). examples
(transitive) To summon (someone) to or inform of a formal meeting or duty. quotations examples
Committee being warned these following were absent or short [...]
1741–2 March 4, Books of Keelman's Hospital, Newcastle, quoted in Northumberland Words (1894)
The people had been invited to the funeral, or warnt, by a special messenger a few days before the funeral took place.
1874, Walter Gregor, An Echo of the Olden Time from the North of Scotland, page 142
[...] the plaintiff fraudulently warned the meeting for November 15, giving only five days' notice [...]
1889, Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of the [State of] Vermont, page 490
(transitive, intransitive, of a clock, possibly obsolete) To make a sound (e.g. clicking or whirring) indicating that it is about to strike or chime (an hour). quotations
Hark! the clock is warning ten;
1885, Walter Towers, Poems, Songs, and Ballads, page 189
No, not a word more, Andrew; the clock has warned for nine, and I am off.
1885, Emma Marshall, In the East Country with Sir Thomas Browne, page 106
The clock warned, and the hands pointed to a few minutes before the hour. The preacher looked towards it. "And, as you sit here," he cried," the Old Year is dragging out its last moments and the New Year is coming up —"
1902, Violet Jacob, The Sheep-Stealers, page 399
(transitive) To caution or admonish (someone) against unwise or unacceptable behaviour. examples
(chiefly with "off", "away", and similar words) To advise or order to go or stay away. examples
(intransitive) To give warning. quotations examples
then Iames Cephas and Iohn [...] agreed with vs that we shuld preache amonge the Hethen and they amonge the Iewes: warnynge only that we shulde remember the poore.
1526, [William Tyndale, transl.], The Newe Testamẽt […] (Tyndale Bible), [Worms, Germany: Peter Schöffer], Galatians :[9-10]]
She is his deepest innocence in spaces of bough and hay before wishes were given a different name to warn that they might not come true [...].
1973, Thomas Pynchon, Gravity's Rainbow, Penguin, published 1995, page 177
She warned that he was seriously thinking of withdrawing his offer to part the waters, ‘so that all you'll get at the Arabian Sea is a saltwater bath [...]’.
1988, Salman Rushdie, The Satanic Verses, Picador, published 2000, page 496
Every country has its resident experts who warn that imported television will destroy the national consciousness and replace it with Dallas, The Waltons, Star Trek and Twin Peaks.
1991, Clive James, “Making Programmes the World Wants”, in The Dreaming Swimmer, Jonathan Cape, published 1992