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Word: caveat (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Lovely City. Before you write her book off as fluffy beach reading, though, know that it isn't about just any kind of sex--this is about what one of the characters (embarrassed and somewhat surprised that she can still get crushes "at her age") calls "geriatric sex." This caveat, coupled with the novel's fun themes of loss, aging and solitude, might take this off the list of cheery summer flings...

Author: By Tatiana Gonzalez, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: More Maude: Geriatric Vixens | 5/14/1999 | See Source »

...turn out to be eggs so much as ?how eggs are consumed in the U.S. -- as in eggs with bacon,? says Gorman. If people insist on eating their eggs with meats, whole milk or doughnuts, they will be heading for trouble. And the latest study does include one major caveat for egg lovers: Stay away from them if you are diabetic. For those with diabetes, eating eggs increases the risk of heart disease...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Egg Is Better Than It?s Cracked Up to Be | 4/21/1999 | See Source »

...endorse the fee increase without a caveat. Though a larger budget will help student groups on campus, the council itself can regain legitimacy only by reducing its size-and fast. Having fewer representatives would increase competition in House elections and thereby increase the council's credibility...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Yes" on Term Bill Hike | 3/24/1999 | See Source »

...site's visitors, whose opinion shows up in the tallies. President Clinton's lofty national approval ratings in conventional, scientific surveys were definitely not reflected in TIME Daily's own polls -- a twist that caused our voters no end of consternation. But that's the Web's own "caveat surfer," and it's probably preferable to fielding calls from Gallup in the middle of dinner. No, the online polls are not indicative of popular opinion. But unlike Gallup's, they're indicative of your opinion, and, if you've got one, TIME Daily doesn't care...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When Robots Attack Online Polls: A Report on Ourselves | 2/26/1999 | See Source »

...system. For example, a hacker figures out my password and logs in to my account to run amok in the network. I use the "last" command to see when I last logged in, and I notice a location or time that I know I did not login. (One caveat--"last" only works on the current machine, for example, login4, so to be thorough, one must log in to all 10 of the general login machines and all 33 of the workstations.) I immediately change my password and notify Harvard security of the intrusion. Without the "last" command, this breach could...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: `Plea for Privacy' Misguided | 1/22/1999 | See Source »

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