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 publishing ['pʌblɪʃɪŋ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 出版, 刊印, 发行



    publishing
    [ noun ]
    the business of issuing printed matter for sale or distribution
    <noun.act>


    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}.

    1. The editors of Glasnost hope to continue publishing, but they are having trouble getting needed equipment and offices.
    2. The company was originally part of Reed International, the publishing company, but was sold with Reed's other packaging interests to Reedpack, a buy-out vehicle, in 1988.
    3. Random House Chairman Robert Bernstein said he is resigning from the publishing house he has run for 23 years.
    4. The intrepid Maxwell finally succeeded on the third try, getting the venerable publishing and information services giant for $2.5 billion in early November.
    5. "We fell slightly short in the second year, and by the third year, it was clear revenue growth couldn't sustain publishing," says Mr. Jennings.
    6. He was that way before, and why I don't quite know," said Corlies Smith, who was instrumental in publishing one of Pynchon's first stories in the early 1960s.
    7. But sources at the company say Paramount would more likely consider buying some publishing assets from whatever entity buys all of Harcourt.
    8. Aside from the gain on the sale of the company's book publishing operations, full-year results included a gain of $13.8 million from earnings from book and other disposed assets.
    9. Recycling, desktop publishing and telephone technology, along with other advances in the industry, will be the topics at general sessions and workshops throughout the three-day event.
    10. The entire board of JOHN FAIRFAX LTD., Australia's biggest publishing concern after Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., was replaced following the takeover of the company by Warwick Fairfax, a 26-year-old member of the concern's founding family.
    11. Durenberger was denounced by his colleagues on a 96-0 vote last week for violating Senate rules by skirting the current limits on honoraria through a book publishing deal.
    12. The Chicago-based newspaper, publishing and broadcasting concern said the notes will be offered on a continuing basis through Salomon Brothers Inc. and Merrill Lynch Capital Markets as agents.
    13. The purchase covers Pergamon Orbit Infoline, a U.S.-based electronic-publishing business, and other software and publishing interests of Pergamon Holdings, which owns 51% of Maxwell Communication.
    14. Her second book made publishing history.
    15. "We see a real future in the magazine category, and we are adding more magazines and building this group," says Martin Singerman, president and chief executive officer of the company's News America publishing unit.
    16. The Editing Process, by Meredith Oakes, deals with the publishing industry.
    17. By the end of the 1980s it was involved in a number of activities including publishing and campaigning. It was hit by the resignations of two chief executives in quick succession and government cuts in funding for employment training schemes.
    18. For Pearson, which publishes Britain's Financial Times and has other publishing and investment banking interests, the success provides some good news after a series of disappointments.
    19. Now, demand for new issues is very strong and investors have begun to take a new interest in publishing stocks.
    20. He also said acquisition candidates in publishing and information services were abandoned because the prices were too high.
    21. But the RJR Nabisco Inc. unit continues to walk a narrow line between publishing its research and promoting its product as a safer cigarette.
    22. Most of the major publishing houses in the U.S. and a number of foreign-owned companies took a look at Grove Weidenfeld, and at first, it was expected to fetch as much as $15 million.
    23. As Raytheon officials themselves have noted, acquirers in recent takeovers have paid premium prices for appliance and publishing companies.
    24. Two defendants on Friday denied bribery charges related to an alleged influence-peddling scandal involving officials and Recruit Co., an information and publishing conglomerate.
    25. QUEBECOR, the holding company for the Peladeau family's publishing, printing and forest products empire, unveiled third-quarter profit of CDollars 16.1m (Dollars 12.9m) or 27 cents a share, up from CDollars 6.1m or 13 cents a year earlier.
    26. She also is a director of McGraw-Hill, a publishing and information services company, but will resign the board post at year's end.
    27. Figures compiled by IDD Information Services, an investment industry research and publishing concern in New York, show Shearson ranked first during the first half of this year in number of takeover deals, at 105.
    28. The same year the Journal and the Knoxville News-Sentinel, currently the city's morning paper, switched publishing cycles.
    29. Octopus's other major shareholder is BTR PLC, a British concern that traded publishing units acquired in a previous takeover for a 35% stake in Octopus in 1985.
    30. On Thursday, Takeshita told Chief Cabinet Secretary Keizo Obuchi to look into the history of other new Cabinet members' ties to Recruit Co., an information and publishing conglomerate at the center of the scandal.
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