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Dictionary
To apprise
verb
To notify, or to make aware; to inform.
Exact(51)
He sent messengers to apprise Reynolds of his situation, and to encourage him to hurry up.
Appraise means to ascertain the value of and does not mean to apprise or to inform.
He said he had called Mr. Odeen Thursday night to apprise him of Northrop's offer.
Ostensibly, this information is meant to apprise visa applicants of the rules of entry and spare them later distress.
"We want to apprise them of the preparations and plans we have made for security," said the spokeswoman, Kathy Ellis.
The Medicare bill also requires the Bush administration to apprise Congress on progress toward opening Australia's drug pricing system.
Similar(5)
Canadian policy makers are at an early stage in the design of legitimate mechanisms for the public to contribute to, and to be apprised of, HTA and coverage decisions.
Gripers flinch from Latinate vocabulary in the mouths of lesser white-collar workers and parvenus in general: to reside, apprise, desist, terminate and so on.
Aardman executives chafed at the creative control DreamWorks tried to exert, particularly with "Flushed Away," according to people apprised of the situation who asked not to be identified because of the sensitive nature of the relationship.
There are no arrows to guide you, no manuals to consult, no winning strategies to be apprised of.
State Department officials said Mr. Powell had not so much pressed Mr. Rumsfeld to move quickly as to have apprised him that the continued indefinite detention was causing diplomatic problems.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com