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 publish ['pʌblɪʃ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vt. 出版, 发行, 公开, 发表, 宣传, 公布

vi. 出版, 发行

[经] 公布, 发行, 宣布




    publish


    Publish \Pub"lish\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Published}; p. pr. &
    vb. n. {Publishing}.] [F. publier, L. publicare, publicatum.
    See {Public}, and {-ish}.]
    1. To make public; to make known to mankind, or to people in
    general; to divulge, as a private transaction; to
    promulgate or proclaim, as a law or an edict.

    Published was the bounty of her name. --Chaucer.

    The unwearied sun, from day to day,
    Does his Creator's power display,
    And publishes to every land
    The work of an almighty hand. --Addison.

    2. To make known by posting, or by reading in a church; as,
    to publish banns of marriage.

    3. To send forth, as a book, newspaper, musical piece, or
    other printed work, either for sale or for general
    distribution; to print, and issue from the press.

    4. To utter, or put into circulation; as, to publish
    counterfeit paper. [U.S.]

    {To publish a will} (Law), to acknowledge it before the
    witnesses as the testator's last will and testament.

    Syn: To announce; proclaim; advertise; declare; promulgate;
    disclose; divulge; reveal. See {Announce}.

    Announce \An*nounce"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Announced}; p. pr. &
    vb. n. {Announcing}.] [OF. anoncier, F. annoncer, fr. L.
    annuntiare; ad + nuntiare to report, relate, nuntius
    messenger, bearer of news. See {Nuncio}, and cf.
    {Annunciate}.]
    1. To give public notice, or first notice of; to make known;
    to publish; to proclaim.

    Her [Q. Elizabeth's] arrival was announced through
    the country by a peal of cannon from the ramparts.
    --Gilpin.

    2. To pronounce; to declare by judicial sentence.

    Publish laws, announce
    Or life or death. --Prior.

    Syn: To proclaim; publish; make known; herald; declare;
    promulgate.

    Usage: To {Publish}, {Announce}, {Proclaim}, {Promulgate}. We
    {publish} what we give openly to the world, either by
    oral communication or by means of the press; as, to
    publish abroad the faults of our neighbors. We
    {announce} what we declare by anticipation, or make
    known for the first time; as, to {announce} the speedy
    publication of a book; to {announce} the approach or
    arrival of a distinguished personage. We {proclaim}
    anything to which we give the widest publicity; as, to
    {proclaim} the news of victory. We {promulgate} when
    we proclaim more widely what has before been known by
    some; as, to {promulgate} the gospel.

    1. As a basic minimum, it should publish the full agenda before council meetings and disclose how governments voted thereafter.
    2. Americans may publish any information they receive from VOA. Only USIA employees are barred from disseminating the information.
    3. The department said Thursday it will publish in Friday's edition of the Federal Register an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking as the first formal step for lifting the ban.
    4. The party has announced plans to publish an opposition newspaper, but it was unclear where it would get the equipment or funding for the project.
    5. Some newspapers, including The Wall Street Journal, also publish advertorials.
    6. The commission plans to publish its new rules within several weeks.
    7. The Times recently said it wouldn't publish any more issues of The Business World, a Sunday magazine supplement, because of lack of advertising.
    8. Perhaps they don't know themselves.' Nevertheless, Mr Khan and other Pakistani officials are hoping that they have done enough to convince the US of their anti-terrorist credentials. Today the US is due to publish its annual report on terrorism.
    9. In late 1984 Gary Diamond, a member of Mr. Durenberger's health subcommittee, offered what must have seemed like a perfect solution to his financial problems: He would publish a book by the senator.
    10. An aide offered to publish it in six to nine months.
    11. The university scientists are free to publish their results, even if they are unfavorable for oat bran.
    12. The reconstruction was done by the Department of Transport's Air Accidents Investigation Branch based at Farnborough, southwest of London, which will publish a report on its findings in the first half of 1990.
    13. The last San Francisco newspaper strike came in 1968 when the Examiner and the Chronicle didn't publish for 55 days.
    14. The magazine is scheduled to publish additional excerpts in next week's issue, in which Sharansky details his 90 months in Soviet prisons and a labor camp.
    15. This is the last set of results the company will publish before before unbundling its industrial investments next month. The results were boosted by one-off benefits from tax adjustments and the sale of investments.
    16. Since the MRC press conference, Wellcome's shares have fallen 8 per cent. Wellcome admits it was not ready for the MRC to publish the results.
    17. The secretive monetary committee, which is unlikely to publish its analysis and recommendations, is believed to oppose significant changes. Mr Alfons Verplaetse, governor of the Belgian central bank, said: 'The lessons from the turmoil are very clear.
    18. "Maybe the one big mistake was deciding in the beginning to publish every detail," he said.
    19. TVSM, the largest publisher of cable guides, would continue to publish the monthly Cable Guide, which has a monthly circulation of 7.2 million, paid by cable system operators.
    20. Some of the society's members want to publish their own newspaper as an alternative to the town's drab Yenakiyevo Worker.
    21. They aren't required to publish accounts or financial statements, and little is known of their activities.
    22. DELIAN LLOYD'S Investment Trust yesterday became the seventh new Lloyd's investment company to publish a pathfinder prospectus.
    23. Zhirinovsky said since the press law was passed in June, putting out his newspaper "has become much easier in general" because he has the right to publish it as a person, rather than a party.
    24. The bill would require the Justice Department to collect hate crime statistics and publish them annually so that federal, state and local law-enforcement officials can measure trends and deploy resources more effectively.
    25. "There would have been no way to publish in journals," said Masters, citing both the length of the material and what he said is traditional difficulty in getting sex research accepted in such forums.
    26. It also fails to take into account a school's sixth-form admissions policy - how many of the weaker pupils get weeded out at age 16. Next week's FT-1,000 is the first survey to publish institutions' stay-on rates.
    27. The commission will vote on the present report and publish its findings for public comment.
    28. The chancellor will publish precise proposals within days. He could do nothing else.
    29. It plans to publish its findings. The problems at Heathrow started a week ago when earth began slipping into a tunnel being excavated using a technique known as the new Austrian tunnelling method.
    30. Newspapers will continue to publish, schools to teach, churches to preach.
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