Caveat in a sentence as a noun

The only caveat I'd add is "don't quit your job if it turns out you enjoy it just fine".

With a caveat I'll say that LG LCD panels are known for these kinds of issues much more so than Samsung's.

Pretty much every "G+ is a ghost town" thread I've read includes the caveat "unless you're Robert Scoble".

It was sort of like supplying student-loans to grad students with the caveat that wages would be garnished until they leave academia.

As a former Marine infantryman, and a former Marine PR idiot, I think his numbers are off but a lot of the concepts are right, with a caveat.

Obvious caveat: this is just my personal opinion.> With this backdrop, we temporarily took down our full-featured app when Google objected to it last MayIf I remember right, this full-featured app included features like:1.

This is very exciting progress, but let's remember that there is a rather important caveat with this sort of thing;"For their computer simulation, the researchers had the advantage of extensive scientific literature on the bacterium.

Speaking as a physician, and with the caveat that I assume Dr. Bedi wouldn't waste his time if this story wasn't mostly accurate, I want to express my frustration - this is why we can't have nice things!Medical bureaucracies are very reticent to chose software from companies that don't have a long track record.

Caveat definitions

noun

a warning against certain acts; "a caveat against unfair practices"

See also: caution

noun

(law) a formal notice filed with a court or officer to suspend a proceeding until filer is given a hearing; "a caveat filed against the probate of a will"