Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    noticeable
    /ˈnəʊtɪsəbl/

    adjective

    • 1. easily seen or noticed; clear or apparent: "a noticeable increase in staff motivation"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of NOTICEABLE is worthy of notice. How to use noticeable in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Noticeable.

  3. C1. easy to see or recognize: There has been a noticeable improvement in Tim's cooking. Synonyms. conspicuous. marked. prominent (NOTICEABLE) pronounced. Opposite. unobtrusive approving. Fewer examples. Plant growth is most noticeable in spring and early summer.

  4. Something that is noticeable is apparent or easy to be noticed. If the change in your report cards is noticeable, let's hope it’s because your grades went up! It’s easy to remember noticeable, by thinking of it as able to be noticed.

  5. adjective. Something that is noticeable is very obvious, so that it is easy to see, hear, or recognize. It is noticeable that trees planted next to houses usually lean away from the house wall. The most noticeable effect of these changes is in the way people are now working together.

  6. Noticeable definition: attracting notice or attention; capable of being noticed. See examples of NOTICEABLE used in a sentence.

  7. adjective. /ˈnəʊtɪsəbl/ easy to see or notice; clear or definite. The new filing system is a noticeable improvement on the old one. There is a noticeable difference between the two brands. Her scars are hardly noticeable now. noticeable in somebody/something This effect is particularly noticeable in younger patients. it is noticeable that…

  8. marked. prominent (NOTICEABLE) pronounced. Opposite. unobtrusive approving. Fewer examples. Plant growth is most noticeable in spring and early summer. In recent years there has been a noticeable decline in such venerable British institutions as afternoon tea and the Sunday roast. His stammer is not very noticeable.

  9. A complete guide to the word "NOTICEABLE": definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  10. The earliest known use of the adjective noticeable is in the mid 1700s. OED's earliest evidence for noticeable is from 1753, in the writing of Samuel Richardson, printer and author. noticeable is formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: notice v., ‑able suffix.

  11. noticeable meaning, definition, what is noticeable: easy to notice: Learn more.