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单词 publish
释义

Definition of publish in English:

publish

verb ˈpʌblɪʃˈpəblɪʃ
[with object]
  • 1Prepare and issue (a book, journal, or piece of music) for public sale.

    we publish practical reference books
    no object the pressures on researchers to publish
    Example sentencesExamples
    • And books are being published and reaching sales figures that would make any publisher proud.
    • Considering the Journal is published bi-monthly, these figures are going to be hard to improve.
    • Caissa Editions also publishes books about older tournaments.
    • Putnam will publish the book in hardcover in fall 2005, with a paperback edition to be published by Berkley in 2006.
    • The Almanac is published twice a year in two separate versions, Russian and English.
    • Why would we need to publish trash books from other countries when we have so many of our own?
    • Monica may have lost out by not having Judith publish her book.
    • This soft cover book was published at the end of last year and it is another in the suspenseful thriller genre for which Leather is so well known.
    • Born in 1941, the son of a lorry driver, he trained as a graphic artist before turning to music and published some books of cartoons as drawings.
    • Whatever it was, he took the secret to his grave, although before his death, he published five books.
    • A facsimile edition of the Black Book was published by the Imperial War Museum in London in 1989.
    • I suspect all five could have been published as one book.
    • Trunk is about to publish a book of library music album covers.
    • It was, as Freedom of Information documents revealed, solely because he dared to publish this book.
    • Carol is also a hit in her own right and publishes music books for children.
    • The author has published six books, five collections of poetry and a volume of essays.
    • Last autumn, the five women published a book on the restaurants they introduced on the Internet.
    • There are obvious marketing perks to publishing a book by a celebrity.
    • All three books were published by Heinemann and sales figures for all three reached 50,000.
    • Kent State University Press will soon publish a book of his Cleveland landscapes.
    Synonyms
    issue, bring out, produce, print
    1. 1.1 Print (something) in a book or journal so as to make it generally known.
      we pay £5 for every letter we publish
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In other news, Art In Motion has signed a new agreement to publish open-edition prints from the Sloan McGill Collection.
      • The Journal also publishes case commentaries, clinical exemplars, and innovative strategies, which send succinct messages about patient care.
      • I discovered that some reasonably well-known names are using Lulu to print and publish collections of their photographs, either in black and white or full colour.
      • Citizens were not amused, letters of protest were published on bulletin boards.
      • A fiery AIGA conference presentation by the pair of them was published in Print.
      • Even the Wall Street Journal published an editorial to remind him that he does not represent the country.
      • Virtually every philosophy journal has published a review of the book, and several have included detailed critical studies of aspects of it.
      • The journals publishing the revised statement have waived copyright protection, making CONSORT easily available to all readers and trialists.
      • The journals would also publish letters and articles sent in by readers, thus keeping the public actively involved in their content.
      • In print, we may publish several photos with the story.
      • When a print newspaper or magazine publishes a story, there is no way to change what has been displayed.
      • He said prizes were being awarded for e-mails sent and e-mails published by newspapers as letters to the editor.
      • Some will use print to publish well-researched news stories that threaten the powerful, some will write pamphlets, others lies and libels.
      • Their work was recently published in Applied Physics Letter and featured in several science journals.
      • As sequencing projects had grown larger and larger it had become quite impossible and pointless for journals to publish the sequences in print.
      • The Register has shamed itself by printing this and should publish an immediate retraction.
      • This column was originally published in the Rapid City Journal, and is reprinted here with permission.
      • After the networks agreed to these demands the White House made similar efforts to stop the print media from publishing transcripts of his remarks.
      • Alves says he hopes to publish a journal article this fall detailing the 2004 findings.
      • The Overland Monthly journal published many letters of Charlotte Haven in December of 1890.
      Synonyms
      make known, make public, publicize, bring to public notice/attention, announce, report, declare, post, communicate, impart, broadcast, transmit, issue, put out, distribute, spread, promulgate, propagandize, disseminate, circulate, air, blazon, herald, proclaim
      disclose, reveal, divulge, leak
    2. 1.2 Make (content) available online.
      a few hours after publishing the post I received a response from the founder of the company
      the photo has not been published on her Instagram account
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Their report was published online Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.
      • This plugin automatically publishes posts from your blog to multiple accounts on Facebook, Twitter, and Google + profiles.
      • Three weeks ago, Gawker published an email sent to them anonymously.
      • I actually published the post on 26 June to allow it to have time to be indexed by Google.
      • The video was originally published on Cherwell's website in May.
      • She routinely publishes playlists on her blog and links to everything she's reading.
      • The letter appears to have been leaked and published on a blog without Mr Stevenson's knowledge or consent.
      • Hundreds of fans of the boyband commented on the images, published widely on U.S. websites, with many expressing anxiety.
      • He has published the photos on his Twitter and Instagram accounts.
      • The video went viral after being published on YouTube.
      • The website reserves the right to publish or reject any message.
    3. 1.3usually as adjective published Prepare and issue the works of (a particular writer)
      a published author
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Did he improve the opportunities for Hispanic writers to get published?
      • Writers who make it - writers who get published - deal with rejection head on.
      • We have on staff published writers, editors and publishers.
      • Though professionally known as a writer, this woman published very little, and in fact wrote rather badly when she did.
      • Acker has explored the limits of experimental fiction more, perhaps, than any other writer published today.
    4. 1.4 Formally announce or read (an edict or marriage banns).
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In May the Government announced plans to publish a draft Bill on corporate manslaughter with the timetable for legislation, plus further details, to be announced this autumn.
      • Banns have to be published at church on three consecutive Sundays.
      • Its replacement is currently being drafted and is expected to be formally published by the Government before July.
      • Print up invitations to a marriage, publish banns at a friendly church, have one or more brides or grooms and even eat wedding cake.
  • 2Law
    Communicate (a libel) to a third party.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And if the matter published is contained in a written or printed document the publisher is guilty of publishing a seditious libel.
    • It is a fundamental aspect of defamation law - certainly in England and Australia but not in Scotland - that you have to publish to a third party.
    • A man in good faith may publish a libel believing it to be true, and it may be found by the jury that he acted in good faith believing it to be true and reasonably believing it to be true, but that in fact the statement was false.
    • A majority of the jurors were members of a political party that owned the company which had published the alleged libel.
    • The day after Wilde received the card, he requested a warrant for the marquess's arrest on the charge of publishing a libel against him.

Derivatives

  • publishable

  • adjective ˈpʌblɪʃəb(ə)lˈpəblɪʃəb(ə)l
    • Incidentally, delivering the piece in publishable form is a good way to avoid any editing at all.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Implementing course assignments that result in publishable manuscripts may be one way of motivating students to examine empirically supported and theory-driven treatments.
      • The sad part about the manuscript is that the story would probably be incredible and highly publishable if it were ghostwritten.
      • By publishable, I never meant marketable by a mainstream publisher.
      • Scientific writers are teaching them how to turn their research into publishable manuscripts.

Origin

Middle English (in the sense 'make generally known'): from the stem of Old French puplier, from Latin publicare 'make public', from publicus (see public).

 
 

Definition of publish in US English:

publish

verbˈpəblɪʃˈpəbliSH
[with object]
  • 1(of an author or company) prepare and issue (a book, journal, piece of music, or other work) for public sale.

    we publish practical reference books
    no object the pressures on researchers to publish
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Kent State University Press will soon publish a book of his Cleveland landscapes.
    • Trunk is about to publish a book of library music album covers.
    • I suspect all five could have been published as one book.
    • Whatever it was, he took the secret to his grave, although before his death, he published five books.
    • The Almanac is published twice a year in two separate versions, Russian and English.
    • Carol is also a hit in her own right and publishes music books for children.
    • Last autumn, the five women published a book on the restaurants they introduced on the Internet.
    • Monica may have lost out by not having Judith publish her book.
    • Putnam will publish the book in hardcover in fall 2005, with a paperback edition to be published by Berkley in 2006.
    • Considering the Journal is published bi-monthly, these figures are going to be hard to improve.
    • Born in 1941, the son of a lorry driver, he trained as a graphic artist before turning to music and published some books of cartoons as drawings.
    • A facsimile edition of the Black Book was published by the Imperial War Museum in London in 1989.
    • All three books were published by Heinemann and sales figures for all three reached 50,000.
    • It was, as Freedom of Information documents revealed, solely because he dared to publish this book.
    • And books are being published and reaching sales figures that would make any publisher proud.
    • This soft cover book was published at the end of last year and it is another in the suspenseful thriller genre for which Leather is so well known.
    • Caissa Editions also publishes books about older tournaments.
    • The author has published six books, five collections of poetry and a volume of essays.
    • Why would we need to publish trash books from other countries when we have so many of our own?
    • There are obvious marketing perks to publishing a book by a celebrity.
    Synonyms
    issue, bring out, produce, print
    1. 1.1 Print (something) in a book or journal so as to make it generally known.
      we pay $10 for every letter we publish
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The Register has shamed itself by printing this and should publish an immediate retraction.
      • The Overland Monthly journal published many letters of Charlotte Haven in December of 1890.
      • Their work was recently published in Applied Physics Letter and featured in several science journals.
      • I discovered that some reasonably well-known names are using Lulu to print and publish collections of their photographs, either in black and white or full colour.
      • As sequencing projects had grown larger and larger it had become quite impossible and pointless for journals to publish the sequences in print.
      • He said prizes were being awarded for e-mails sent and e-mails published by newspapers as letters to the editor.
      • The Journal also publishes case commentaries, clinical exemplars, and innovative strategies, which send succinct messages about patient care.
      • A fiery AIGA conference presentation by the pair of them was published in Print.
      • In print, we may publish several photos with the story.
      • The journals publishing the revised statement have waived copyright protection, making CONSORT easily available to all readers and trialists.
      • The journals would also publish letters and articles sent in by readers, thus keeping the public actively involved in their content.
      • Citizens were not amused, letters of protest were published on bulletin boards.
      • After the networks agreed to these demands the White House made similar efforts to stop the print media from publishing transcripts of his remarks.
      • Some will use print to publish well-researched news stories that threaten the powerful, some will write pamphlets, others lies and libels.
      • This column was originally published in the Rapid City Journal, and is reprinted here with permission.
      • Even the Wall Street Journal published an editorial to remind him that he does not represent the country.
      • When a print newspaper or magazine publishes a story, there is no way to change what has been displayed.
      • Virtually every philosophy journal has published a review of the book, and several have included detailed critical studies of aspects of it.
      • Alves says he hopes to publish a journal article this fall detailing the 2004 findings.
      • In other news, Art In Motion has signed a new agreement to publish open-edition prints from the Sloan McGill Collection.
      Synonyms
      make known, make public, publicize, bring to public attention, bring to public notice, announce, report, declare, post, communicate, impart, broadcast, transmit, issue, put out, distribute, spread, promulgate, propagandize, disseminate, circulate, air, blazon, herald, proclaim
    2. 1.2 Make (content) available online.
      a few hours after publishing the post I received a response from the founder of the company
      the photo has not been published on her Instagram account
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Hundreds of fans of the boyband commented on the images, published widely on U.S. websites, with many expressing anxiety.
      • He has published the photos on his Twitter and Instagram accounts.
      • The letter appears to have been leaked and published on a blog without Mr Stevenson's knowledge or consent.
      • The video went viral after being published on YouTube.
      • The website reserves the right to publish or reject any message.
      • I actually published the post on 26 June to allow it to have time to be indexed by Google.
      • Their report was published online Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.
      • Three weeks ago, Gawker published an email sent to them anonymously.
      • The video was originally published on Cherwell's website in May.
      • She routinely publishes playlists on her blog and links to everything she's reading.
      • This plugin automatically publishes posts from your blog to multiple accounts on Facebook, Twitter, and Google + profiles.
    3. 1.3usually as adjective published Prepare and issue the works of (a particular writer)
      a published author
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Did he improve the opportunities for Hispanic writers to get published?
      • Writers who make it - writers who get published - deal with rejection head on.
      • Acker has explored the limits of experimental fiction more, perhaps, than any other writer published today.
      • Though professionally known as a writer, this woman published very little, and in fact wrote rather badly when she did.
      • We have on staff published writers, editors and publishers.
    4. 1.4 Formally announce or read (an edict or marriage banns).
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Banns have to be published at church on three consecutive Sundays.
      • In May the Government announced plans to publish a draft Bill on corporate manslaughter with the timetable for legislation, plus further details, to be announced this autumn.
      • Print up invitations to a marriage, publish banns at a friendly church, have one or more brides or grooms and even eat wedding cake.
      • Its replacement is currently being drafted and is expected to be formally published by the Government before July.
  • 2Law
    Communicate (a libel) to a third party.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A majority of the jurors were members of a political party that owned the company which had published the alleged libel.
    • A man in good faith may publish a libel believing it to be true, and it may be found by the jury that he acted in good faith believing it to be true and reasonably believing it to be true, but that in fact the statement was false.
    • The day after Wilde received the card, he requested a warrant for the marquess's arrest on the charge of publishing a libel against him.
    • And if the matter published is contained in a written or printed document the publisher is guilty of publishing a seditious libel.
    • It is a fundamental aspect of defamation law - certainly in England and Australia but not in Scotland - that you have to publish to a third party.

Origin

Middle English (in the sense ‘make generally known’): from the stem of Old French puplier, from Latin publicare ‘make public’, from publicus (see public).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/21 15:26:33