this post was submitted on 13 Aug 2023
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caveat /ˈkavɪat/ noun
a warning or proviso of specific stipulations, conditions, or limitations. 'there are a number of caveats which concern the validity of the assessment results'
Emphasis mine.
I understand now the purpose of it. Normally in non-americanised English, using your example, caveat is used as follows:
"The deal has a caveat that x gets y" where caveat covers both meanings.
But that's been Americanised because you're separating those meanings effectively saying "There's a caveat, the caveat is x gets y" as, "There's a caveat, the carve out is x gets y".
So, it isn't that your TV personalities couldn't speak, it's because your contract writers were semi-literate.
What were you saying about my English competency?