notate bene
English
Etymology
Classical Latin notāte (plural present active imperative form of notō (“I mark, I note, I observe”); compare notā) + bene (“well”), formed on the pattern of nota bene, used as its plural.
Pronunciation
- (Latin) IPA(key): /noˈtaːte ˌbene/
Interjection
- plural of nota bene
- 1940: the Classical Association of the Middle West and South, the Classical Association of New England, the California Classical Association, the Classical Association of the Atlantic States, and the Classical Association of the Pacific Northwest, The Classical journal, volume 36, page 22 (Classical Association of the Middle West and South)
- “We cover some of this material in our seventh- and eighth-grade social science classes.” Notate bene those magic words, “social science!”
- 2003: Mary Ann Vigilante Mannino and Justin Vitiello, Breaking open: reflections on Italian American women’s writing, page 28 (Purdue University Press; →ISBN, 9781557532435)
- Notate bene: As an existentialist “condemned to skepticism” — especially regarding my own assertions — I entertain the following doubts: by the time this book goes into print and on the market, the Italy a few of us know today will have changed radically.
- 1940: the Classical Association of the Middle West and South, the Classical Association of New England, the California Classical Association, the Classical Association of the Atlantic States, and the Classical Association of the Pacific Northwest, The Classical journal, volume 36, page 22 (Classical Association of the Middle West and South)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.