释义 |
beware the ides of March idiom in Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar", a warning given to Caesar about 15 March , the day on which he was assassinated(= killed). It is sometimes used as a warning in other situations: The way things have worked out for the team this month, they should have heeded the warning - beware the ides of March! SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases Threats & warnings advance warning alarm alarm bell bell-ringing bomb scare bow brushback pitch burglar alarm canary cautionary don't you dareidiom early warning system hear warning bellsidiom one swallow doesn't make a summeridiom protection racket red alert red flag scare quotes screamer yellow card
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