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Noticeable   /nˈoʊtəsəbəl/   Listen
Noticeable

adjective
1.
Capable or worthy of being perceived.  "Noticeable for its vivid historical background" , "A noticeable lack of friendliness"
2.
Capable of being detected.  Synonym: detectable.
3.
Undesirably noticeable.  Synonym: obtrusive.  "Equally obtrusive was the graffiti"
4.
Readily noticed.



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"Noticeable" Quotes from Famous Books



... They presented a noticeable contrast, for Florence was dressed as beseemed her station, while Dodger, in spite of his manly, attractive face, was roughly attired, and looked like ...
— Adrift in New York - Tom and Florence Braving the World • Horatio Alger

... to boot. It was a merry war, all right, while it lasted—scheming and squabbling and backbiting and tattling and corrupting servants to carry tales—all that sort of thing. To be honest about it, I don't just know which was the worse of the two; they didn't either of them stick at much of anything noticeable. But, of course, Miss Matring was handicapped, not being blood-kin, and the upshot was she had to go—and until you showed up the old maid was actually miserable for want of somebody to hate. I noticed the light of battle in those beady little eyes of hers the minute she laid ...
— Nobody • Louis Joseph Vance

... They had courage and genius and enthusiasm, but they had no horror of immorality as such. The Stoics saw what was wanting, and tried to supply it; but though they could provide a theory of action, they could not make the theory into a reality, and it is noticeable that Stoicism as a rule of life became important only when adopted by the Romans. The Catholic Church effected something in its better days when it had its courts which treated sins as crimes. Calvinism, ...
— Caesar: A Sketch • James Anthony Froude

... no people understands or truly sympathizes with any foreign nation—not even among the Allies. They are strangers because they have been kept strangers. This creates suspicion, envy, enmity, for they have not in any noticeable degree lived together. They do not know one another's customs, habits, perspectives. As a result, armies, navies, tariffs, treaties backed by force, are necessary to hold civilization precariously in shape—and at what colossal effort, anxiety, ...
— Villa Elsa - A Story of German Family Life • Stuart Henry

... of the bunch of rabbits he found furtively grazing a quarter of a mile from the clear patch, he carried it well away into the bush and devoured it steadily, from the hind-quarters to the head, after the fashion of his kind, who always begin at the tail-end of their meals. It was noticeable, by the way, that Finn approached the neighbourhood of the clear patch with reluctance, and got right away from it ...
— Finn The Wolfhound • A. J. Dawson


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