Note /(nōt)/

Note

v. t.
  1. To butt; to push with the horns. [Prov. Eng.]

Note

  1. Know not; knows not. [Obs.]

Note

n.
  1. Nut. [Obs.]

Note

n.
  1. Need; needful business. [Obs.]

Note

n.
  1. A mark or token by which a thing may be known; a visible sign; a character; a distinctive mark or feature; a characteristic quality.
    Whosoever appertain to the visible body of the church, they have also the notes of external profession.
    She [the Anglican church] has the note of possession, the note of freedom from party titles,the note of life -- a tough life and a vigorous.
    What a note of youth, of imagination, of impulsive eagerness, there was through it all !
    — Mrs. Humphry Ward.
  2. A mark, or sign, made to call attention, to point out something to notice, or the like; a sign, or token, proving or giving evidence.
  3. A brief remark; a marginal comment or explanation; hence, an annotation on a text or author; a comment; a critical, explanatory, or illustrative observation.
    The best writers have been perplexed with notes, and obscured with illustrations.
    — Felton.
  4. A brief writing intended to assist the memory; a memorandum; a minute.
  5. Hence, a writing intended to be used in speaking; memoranda to assist a speaker, being either a synopsis, or the full text of what is to be said; as, to preach from notes; also, a reporter's memoranda; the original report of a speech or of proceedings.
  6. A short informal letter; a billet.
  7. A diplomatic missive or written communication.
  8. A written or printed paper acknowledging a debt, and promising payment; as, a promissory note; a note of hand; a negotiable note.
  9. A list of items or of charges; an account. [Obs.]
    Here is now the smith's note for shoeing.
  10. A character, variously formed, to indicate the length of a tone, and variously placed upon the staff to indicate its pitch. Hence: (Mus.)
    The wakeful bird . . . tunes her nocturnal note.
    That note of revolt against the eighteenth century, which we detect in Goethe, was struck by Winckelmann.
    — W. Pater.
  11. Observation; notice; heed.
    Give orders to my servants that they take No note at all of our being absent hence.
  12. Notification; information; intelligence. [Obs.]
    The king . . . shall have note of this.
  13. State of being under observation. [Obs.]
    Small matters . . . continually in use and in note.
  14. Reputation; distinction; as, a poet of note.
    There was scarce a family of note which had not poured out its blood on the field or the scaffold.
  15. Stigma; brand; reproach. [Obs.]

Phrases & Compounds

Note of hand
a promissory note.

Note

v. t.

imp. & p. p. Noted; p. pr. & vb. n. Noting

  1. To notice with care; to observe; to remark; to heed; to attend to.
    No more of that; I have noted it well.
    The world will little note, nor long remember, what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here.
    — Abraham Lincoln (Gettysburg Address, 1863).
  2. To record in writing; to make a memorandum of.
    Every unguarded word . . . was noted down.
    — Maccaulay.
  3. To charge, as with crime (with of or for before the thing charged); to brand. [Obs.]
    They were both noted of incontinency.
  4. To denote; to designate.
  5. To annotate. [R.]
  6. To set down in musical characters.

Phrases & Compounds

To note a bill
to record on the back of it a refusal of acceptance, as the ground of a protest, which is done officially by a notary.