message

/ˈmesɪdʒ/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈmesɪdʒ/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈme-sij/ (ame, mw) · /ˈmes.ɪdʒ/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈmes.ɪdʒ/ (ame, ipa)

message — noun

  • messagesingular
  • messagesplural

1. a brief spoken or written communication that one person passes to another, typic

1.名詞A2
釋義

a brief spoken or written communication that one person passes to another, typically because they are unable to talk face to face at that moment.

例句

Hari left a message for Elena saying the meeting had been moved to Friday afternoon.

leave a message for + person + that-clause

Shirin received a voice message from her sister, who was traveling in South Korea.

receive a message from + person/place

同義詞
  • note

    shorter and almost always written; less formal than 'message'

  • communication

    more formal and broader in scope, often used for official exchanges

  • memo

    a written message within an organization, more formal

文法句型

leave/ send/ get + a message

message + from/ to/ for

用法筆記

This is the broadest sense of 'message' and applies to any short communication — spoken, written, or electronic. In the phrase 'leave a message', it often refers to a recorded phone message or a note passed through a third person.

常見錯誤

I left a message on his phone that I will be late.
I left a message on his phone saying I would be late.
💡'say' or 'tell someone that' is more natural in message content than 'that'.

2. a signal that travels through the nervous system, carrying information between t

2.名詞B2
釋義

a signal that travels through the nervous system, carrying information between the brain and other parts of the body.

例句

The nerves in Ignacio's fingers sent a message when he touched the hot pan.

nerves send a message to the brain

A message traveled along Ayana's nerve path when the doctor tapped her knee.

message travels along a nerve path

同義詞
  • signal

    more general term; used for any type of transmitted information in the body

  • impulse

    specifically a brief electrical signal traveling along a nerve cell; more technical

文法句型

send + a message + from/ to [body part]

用法筆記

This sense is primarily used in biology and medicine. The word is used with verbs like 'send', 'carry', 'travel', and 'block', usually in the singular with 'a' or in the plural.

常見錯誤

The nerve sent a message that my hand was hot.
The nerves sent a message to my brain telling it that my hand was hot.
💡The message is sent from the body part to the brain, not the other way.

3. the central point or lesson that an author, speaker, film-maker, or artist hopes

3.名詞B1
釋義

the central point or lesson that an author, speaker, film-maker, or artist hopes to get across to people.

例句

The message of the film was that family matters more than money or success.

the message of [work] + that-clause

Nkechi's speech carried a clear message about protecting the environment for future generations.

carry a clear message about [topic]

同義詞
  • meaning

    broader; can refer to any significance, not just intended communication

  • theme

    a recurring subject or topic, not necessarily the single most important idea

  • moral

    specifically a lesson about right and wrong, common in fables and stories

文法句型

the message of [noun]

message + that-clause

用法筆記

Unlike sense 1, this meaning is abstract — the 'message' is not a specific piece of information but an overall lesson, argument, or moral. Common with 'of' (the message of the book) or a that-clause (its message is that...).

常見錯誤

The book's message is about don't give up.
The book's message is that you should never give up.
💡Use a that-clause, not 'about' + imperative.

4. the meaning that a person figures out from someone else's indirect hints or acti

4.名詞B2
釋義

the meaning that a person figures out from someone else's indirect hints or actions, without those things being stated directly.

例句

After Sophia yawned three times, Hao finally got the message and ended the conversation.

get the message + and + action taken

The landlord raised the rent, hoping the tenants would get the message and leave.

同義詞

文法句型

get the message

用法筆記

This sense is almost exclusively used in the fixed expression 'get the message'. The phrase means 'understand what someone is indirectly trying to tell you'. It does not have a direct object (you cannot 'get the message something'). The subject is usually a person who has been missing hints.

常見錯誤

I got his message that he was upset.
I got the message that he was upset.
💡Use 'the', not 'his', in this idiomatic sense.

5. a strong signal or idea that someone's actions or words deliberately communicate

5.名詞B2
釋義

a strong signal or idea that someone's actions or words deliberately communicate to other people, often with a social or political purpose.

例句

By hiring people from different backgrounds, the company sent a message that it valued diversity.

send a message that + clause (deliberate signal)

Quinn chose to quit and sent a strong message to management about working conditions.

send a strong message to [audience] about [issue]

同義詞
  • signal

    very similar in meaning; 'send a signal' can replace 'send a message' in most contexts

  • statement

    more formal; 'make a statement' emphasizes the deliberate nature of the communication

文法句型

send (out) a message

send a clear message

用法筆記

Common in the phrases 'send a message' and 'send a clear/strong message'. The 'message' here is not a literal piece of information — it is an impression or signal created by an action. Frequently used in political, social, or workplace contexts.

常見錯誤

The protest sent a message to the government for changing the law.
The protest sent a message to the government that people wanted the law changed.
💡Use a that-clause or 'about' to explain what the message is.

message — verb