alert
alert em 30 segundos
- A warning message about danger.
- A signal to pay attention immediately.
- A notification on your phone or TV.
- A state of being ready for an emergency.
The weather station issued a severe storm alert for our county.
- Primary Function
- To warn individuals of impending danger or important events.
I received a text alert that my package was delivered.
The soldiers were put on high alert during the night.
- Common Context
- Emergency services and public safety broadcasting.
The amber alert helped the police find the missing child.
- Technological Aspect
- Modern smartphones have built-in emergency alert systems.
We heard the tsunami alert and ran to higher ground.
The government decided to issue a health alert.
- Verb Collocation
- Issue an alert means to officially publish or broadcast a warning.
Did you get the flood alert on your mobile phone?
The security guards are on high alert today.
- Prepositional Phrase
- To be 'on alert' means to be ready for danger.
There is an alert for icy roads this morning.
Thankfully, the fire alarm was just a false alert.
- Adjective Pairing
- Red, amber, and yellow are often used to color-code alerts.
The news anchor announced a tornado alert for the evening.
- Weather Context
- Used by meteorologists to warn of storms, heatwaves, or freezes.
My phone screen lit up with a breaking news alert.
The highway sign displayed an Amber alert with a license plate number.
- Public Safety
- Used to mobilize the public to assist in emergencies.
I received a fraud alert from my bank after buying a laptop abroad.
The airport was placed on a security alert due to an unattended bag.
- Transportation
- Used to manage passenger safety and security protocols.
Incorrect: The dog is an alert. Correct: The dog is alert.
- Noun vs Adjective
- Do not use an article (a/an) when describing a state of being awake.
Incorrect: The army is in alert. Correct: The army is on alert.
Incorrect: The police made an alert. Correct: The police issued an alert.
- Verb Choice
- Use 'issue' or 'send' instead of 'make' or 'do'.
Incorrect: An alert of rain. Correct: An alert for rain.
Incorrect: I have three alert on my phone. Correct: I have three alerts on my phone.
- Countability
- Alert is a countable noun. You can have one alert or many alerts.
The weather alert served as a strong warning to stay indoors.
- Alert vs Warning
- Alerts are usually immediate and systemic; warnings can be general advice.
The fire alarm sounded, acting as an immediate alert to evacuate.
I turned off my social media notifications, but kept my emergency alerts on.
- Alert vs Notification
- Alerts imply urgency or danger; notifications are just general information.
The eviction notice was serious, but the tornado alert was an emergency.
The flashing red light was a clear alert that the machine was broken.
- Alert vs Signal
- A signal is the physical manifestation (light, sound) that carries the alert.
How Formal Is It?
Nível de dificuldade
Gramática essencial
Using the indefinite article 'an' before vowel sounds (an alert).
Prepositions of state (on alert).
Passive voice for official announcements (An alert was issued).
First conditional for automated systems (If X happens, it will send an alert).
Pluralization of regular nouns (alert -> alerts).
Exemplos por nível
I have an alert on my phone.
A message on the mobile device.
Uses the indefinite article 'an' before a vowel sound.
The weather alert says it will rain.
A warning about the weather.
Compound noun 'weather alert' acting as the subject.
Did you hear the alert?
Listen to the warning sound.
Simple past tense question with the verb 'hear'.
This is a red alert.
A very serious warning.
Adjective 'red' modifying the noun 'alert'.
I get a news alert every morning.
A daily news message.
Present simple tense for a routine action.
The alert is very loud.
The warning sound makes a lot of noise.
Subject-verb-adjective structure.
Look at the alert on the screen.
See the message on the computer.
Imperative sentence giving a command.
We need to read the alert.
We must look at the warning text.
Infinitive verb 'to read' following 'need'.
The police issued an alert for a stolen car.
Sent out a warning about a missing vehicle.
Past tense verb 'issued' with the preposition 'for'.
My bank sent me a fraud alert yesterday.
A warning about bad activity on my account.
Indirect object 'me' and direct object 'a fraud alert'.
The soldiers are on high alert tonight.
They are very ready for danger.
Prepositional phrase 'on high alert'.
Please set an alert for the meeting at 3 PM.
Create a reminder for the appointment.
Imperative with the verb 'set'.
There is a flood alert near the river.
A warning that water might cover the land.
Existential 'There is' to introduce the alert.
I canceled the alert because I woke up early.
Stopped the alarm from ringing.
Complex sentence with a 'because' clause.
The school sent an email alert to all parents.
A warning message sent via internet mail.
Compound noun 'email alert'.
We heard the tsunami alert and ran away.
Listened to the ocean warning and escaped.
Compound sentence with two past tense verbs.
The government has issued a nationwide security alert.
A warning for the whole country about safety.
Present perfect tense 'has issued'.
If the temperature drops, the system will trigger an alert.
The machine will start a warning if it gets cold.
First conditional sentence.
Many people ignored the alert, thinking it was a false alarm.
People did not pay attention to the warning.
Participle clause 'thinking it was...'.
You can customize which alerts you want to receive on this app.
You can choose your warning settings.
Relative clause 'which alerts you want'.
The hospital was put on alert after the major highway accident.
The hospital was made ready for an emergency.
Passive voice 'was put on alert'.
An amber alert was broadcast on all local television stations.
A missing child warning was shown on TV.
Passive voice 'was broadcast'.
I signed up for text alerts to track my package delivery.
I registered to get messages about my mail.
Phrasal verb 'signed up for'.
The sudden alert interrupted our quiet evening at home.
The unexpected warning stopped our relaxing time.
Adjective 'sudden' modifying the subject.
The meteorological agency upgraded the weather alert to a severe warning.
Changed the warning to a higher level of danger.
Verb 'upgraded' showing a change in status.
Due to the persistent threat, the military base remains on high alert.
Because of the danger, the base is still very ready.
Formal prepositional phrase 'Due to'.
Users have complained about alert fatigue from receiving too many notifications.
People are tired of getting too many warnings.
Concept noun 'alert fatigue'.
The automated system is designed to dispatch an alert within seconds of a breach.
The computer sends a warning very quickly if someone breaks in.
Passive infinitive 'to be designed to dispatch'.
Authorities issued a preliminary alert pending further investigation of the incident.
An early warning was sent while they check what happened.
Adjective 'preliminary' and preposition 'pending'.
The financial software provides real-time alerts for significant market fluctuations.
The program gives instant warnings when money values change a lot.
Compound adjective 'real-time'.
He dismissed the alert as a mere glitch in the software.
He ignored the warning, thinking it was just a computer error.
Verb 'dismissed' with the preposition 'as'.
The public was advised to remain vigilant despite the cancellation of the alert.
People were told to stay careful even though the warning ended.
Preposition 'despite' showing contrast.
The dissemination of the emergency alert was hampered by widespread power outages.
Spreading the warning was difficult because there was no electricity.
Formal noun 'dissemination' and passive voice.
The protocol dictates that a tier-one alert must be authorized by the director.
The rules say the highest warning needs the boss's permission.
Noun clause 'that a tier-one alert...'.
Critics argue that the frequent use of the alert system diminishes its overall efficacy.
People say using the warning too much makes it work less well.
Complex sentence with a 'that' clause expressing an argument.
The epidemiological alert prompted an immediate mobilization of healthcare resources.
The disease warning caused doctors and medicine to be moved quickly.
Advanced academic vocabulary 'epidemiological'.
In the event of a systemic failure, a redundant alert mechanism will activate automatically.
If the main system breaks, a backup warning will start by itself.
Prepositional phrase 'In the event of'.
The geopolitical crisis triggered a global security alert, affecting international travel.
The world problem caused a safety warning everywhere, changing flights.
Participle phrase 'affecting international travel'.
The municipality is overhauling its archaic alert infrastructure to incorporate mobile push notifications.
The city is fixing its old warning system to use phone messages.
Advanced vocabulary 'overhauling' and 'archaic'.
She analyzed the rhetorical framing of the alert to understand its psychological impact on the populace.
She studied how the warning was written to see how it made people feel.
Academic phrasing 'rhetorical framing'.
The insidious nature of the cyber threat necessitated a covert alert to key stakeholders rather than a public broadcast.
The hidden danger meant a secret warning was sent to important people, not everyone.
Highly formal vocabulary 'insidious', 'necessitated', 'covert'.
The efficacy of the early warning alert is contingent upon the populace's prior conditioning and trust in the issuing authority.
The warning only works if people are trained and believe the government.
Complex prepositional phrase 'contingent upon'.
He posited that the proliferation of trivial alerts has engendered a state of chronic cognitive apathy among digital consumers.
He suggested that too many silly warnings make people stop caring.
Academic verbs 'posited', 'engendered'.
The directive mandates the immediate cessation of all non-essential operations upon receipt of a DEFCON 2 alert.
The rule says stop all normal work when you get this high-level military warning.
Formal legalistic phrasing 'directive mandates', 'cessation'.
The nuanced phrasing of the economic alert was deliberately calibrated to forestall market panic while signaling an impending downturn.
The money warning was written carefully to stop fear but still show bad times are coming.
Passive voice with adverbial modification 'deliberately calibrated'.
The archaic siren system, once the vanguard of civil defense alerts, has been rendered obsolete by ubiquitous cellular technology.
The old loud alarms are no longer useful because everyone has cell phones.
Appositive phrase 'once the vanguard...'.
Mitigating the deleterious effects of false alerts requires a robust algorithmic filtering mechanism to ensure high-fidelity signal transmission.
Stopping the bad results of fake warnings needs good computer math to send true messages.
Gerund phrase as subject 'Mitigating the deleterious effects...'.
The sociopolitical ramifications of issuing a unilateral alert without allied consensus were deemed too severe to countenance.
The political problems of sending a warning alone without friends agreeing were too bad to allow.
Advanced abstract nouns 'ramifications', 'consensus', 'countenance'.
Colocações comuns
Frases Comuns
Frequentemente confundido com
Expressões idiomáticas
Fácil de confundir
Padrões de frases
Como usar
While 'alert' can be a verb or adjective, as a noun it almost always refers to the specific message or state of warning. Do not confuse 'an alert' (the message) with 'being alert' (the state of being awake).
- Using 'a' instead of 'an' before alert (e.g., saying 'a alert').
- Saying 'in alert' instead of 'on alert' when describing a state of readiness.
- Using the verb 'make' with alert (e.g., 'make an alert' instead of 'issue an alert').
- Confusing the noun form with the adjective form (e.g., 'I am an alert' instead of 'I am alert').
- Treating alert as an uncountable noun (e.g., 'I have much alert' instead of 'many alerts').
Dicas
Use 'an' not 'a'
Because 'alert' starts with a vowel sound, always use the article 'an' before it in the singular form. Say 'an alert', never 'a alert'. This makes your speech flow smoothly.
Pair with 'Issue'
When talking about official warnings from the government or police, use the verb 'issue'. 'The police issued an alert' sounds very professional and native-like.
On Alert
Memorize the phrase 'on alert' as a single chunk. Do not say 'in alert' or 'at alert'. It describes a state of being ready for danger.
Spoiler Alert
Use 'spoiler alert' in casual conversation to sound like a native speaker. Say it right before you tell someone how a movie ends.
Digital vs Physical
Remember that alerts can be digital (on a phone) or physical (a siren). The word works perfectly for both modern technology and traditional warning systems.
One 'L'
Alert is spelled with only one 'L'. Do not spell it 'allert'. It is a short, simple word to spell.
Stress the Second Syllable
Make sure to emphasize the 'lert' part of the word. Saying 'UH-lert' instead of 'uh-LERT' can sound unnatural.
Alert vs Alarm
If it just makes a loud noise, call it an alarm. If it gives you information about a danger, call it an alert.
Regular Plural
Alert is a regular countable noun. Just add an 's' to make it plural: alerts. 'I have many alerts on my phone.'
Red Alert
Use 'red alert' to describe the highest level of emergency. It is a very descriptive and commonly understood phrase in English.
Memorize
Mnemônico
A-LERT: A Loud Emergency Requires Time (to prepare).
Origem da palavra
Early 17th century
Contexto cultural
Often use the term 'severe weather warning' alongside 'alert'.
Amber Alerts are very common and broadcast on highways and phones for missing children.
Earthquake Early Warning alerts are a critical part of daily life and infrastructure.
Pratique na vida real
Contextos reais
Iniciadores de conversa
"Did you receive the weather alert on your phone today?"
"What do you do when you hear a fire alert in a building?"
"Do you think we get too many alerts on our smartphones?"
"Have you ever experienced a false alert?"
"How does your country send emergency alerts to the public?"
Temas para diário
Describe a time when an alert helped you avoid a bad situation.
Write about the different types of alerts you receive on your phone in a single day.
Do you think emergency alerts are effective? Why or why not?
Imagine you are in charge of a city. How would you design a new alert system?
Write a short story that begins with a character receiving a mysterious alert.
Perguntas frequentes
10 perguntasYes, 'alert' is a countable noun. You can have one alert or many alerts. For example, 'I received three alerts on my phone today.' It follows standard pluralization rules by adding an 's'.
When talking about a state of readiness, use 'on' (e.g., 'The army is on alert'). When talking about the subject of the warning, use 'for' or 'about' (e.g., 'An alert for rain' or 'An alert about the traffic').
An alarm is usually a loud noise designed to wake you up or cause immediate reaction (like a fire alarm). An alert is a message or notification containing specific information about a situation (like a weather alert). An alert can include an alarm sound, but it is primarily informational.
It is not natural to say 'make an alert'. Native speakers use verbs like 'issue', 'send', 'sound', or 'trigger'. For example, 'The government issued an alert'.
'Spoiler alert' is a common informal phrase. It is used before you reveal an important plot detail about a movie, book, or TV show. It warns the listener so they can stop listening if they haven't seen it yet.
The noun 'alert' can be used in both formal and informal contexts. A government issuing a 'security alert' is formal. Telling a friend you got a 'text alert' is informal.
A false alert, also known as a false alarm, happens when a warning is issued but there is actually no danger. For example, if a smoke detector goes off because of cooking steam, it is a false alert.
It is pronounced /əˈlɜːrt/. The stress is on the second syllable. The 'a' sounds like a short 'uh', and the 'er' sounds like the 'er' in 'her'.
'On high alert' means being in a state of extreme readiness and watchfulness because a danger is very likely or imminent. It is often used for military or security forces.
Yes, 'alert' can also be a verb, meaning to warn someone. For example, 'I will alert the manager about the problem.' However, this guide focuses on its use as a noun.
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Summary
The noun 'alert' is an essential word for safety and modern communication, representing a warning or notification that requires immediate attention, whether it's a weather emergency, a security issue, or a simple digital reminder on your smartphone.
- A warning message about danger.
- A signal to pay attention immediately.
- A notification on your phone or TV.
- A state of being ready for an emergency.
Use 'an' not 'a'
Because 'alert' starts with a vowel sound, always use the article 'an' before it in the singular form. Say 'an alert', never 'a alert'. This makes your speech flow smoothly.
Pair with 'Issue'
When talking about official warnings from the government or police, use the verb 'issue'. 'The police issued an alert' sounds very professional and native-like.
On Alert
Memorize the phrase 'on alert' as a single chunk. Do not say 'in alert' or 'at alert'. It describes a state of being ready for danger.
Spoiler Alert
Use 'spoiler alert' in casual conversation to sound like a native speaker. Say it right before you tell someone how a movie ends.
Exemplo
I received a weather alert on my phone about the heavy rain.
Conteúdo relacionado
Esta palavra em outros idiomas
Frases relacionadas
Mais palavras de Weather
advisory
A1Um aviso é um anúncio oficial ou advertência sobre algo, especialmente condições meteorológicas perigosas.
atmosphere
A1A camada de ar e gases que envolve a Terra ou outro planeta. Também pode descrever o sentimento ou o humor de um lugar ou situação específica.
atmospheric
B2Relativo à atmosfera da Terra ou que cria um ambiente distintivo e evocativo. O filme é conhecido por sua trilha sonora atmosférica e envolvente.
autumn
A1O outono é a estação entre o verão e o inverno.
balmy
C1Descreve um tempo ameno e agradável. 'A brisa estava suave e agradável.'
blizzard
B2Uma tempestade de neve severa com ventos fortes e baixa visibilidade, ou uma massa repentina e avassaladora de algo. (Uma tempestade de neve severa, caracterizada por ventos fortes e visibilidade significativamente reduzida, ou uma súbita e avassaladora afluência de algo, como e-mails.)
blowy
B2Ventoso ou com rajadas. 'Está um dia ventoso (blowy), os cabelos ficaram todos desarrumados.'
blustery
B2O tempo está ventoso e com rajadas fortes e irregulares. Ele fez um discurso fanfarrão, mas ninguém acreditou em suas promessas.
breeze
B2Ela passou pelo exame com total facilidade.
breezy
B2Está um dia fresco e com brisa.