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Oleg
Heed vs attention

Hello,

 

could you explain please when do you use the word "heed" and when the word "attention"? What is the difference?

Jan 24, 2014 12:51 AM
Comments · 7
3

Southern US Perspective:

 

"Heed" and "attention" have similar meanings when used as nouns, but the difference is that heed is sometimes used as a verb. Also, I should point out that the "heed" is not commonly used; the word sounds dated. It isn't archaic though, mind you.

 

examples: 

<em>Pay attention, class!</em>

<em>The next assignment will require your full attention. </em>

<em>
</em>

<em>Pay heed to the police officer's warnings.</em>

<em>If she heard, she paid no heed.</em>

<em>We must take heed of the suggestions.</em>

January 25, 2014
2

You should TAKE heed of warnings. You should PAY attention to warnings. Means the same. Taking heed is less commonly used.

January 24, 2014
1

according to the dictionary heed could be both noun and verb, depends on the context

January 24, 2014
1

A frequent difference is that "attention" refers to the act of closely observing or seeing, while "heed" adds the idea of following or obeying what you have seen or heard.   Example:  "I paid attention to what he was saying, but I didn't heed him."  This means you listened carefully to what he was saying, but you didn't do, follow, or obey what he said.

January 24, 2014

 

  Heed is a verb.    Attention is a noun.

 

   Starting from there,  you can recognize that the words are not equivalent or interchangeable.

So the issue is not a choise  between using   HEED as an alternative to ATTENTION.

 

.

January 24, 2014
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