make public
公开,公布,公开化,公之于众
Related Words
Definitions
- 1
- : of, relating to, or affecting a population or a community as a whole:public funds; a public nuisance.
- : done, made, acting, etc., for the community as a whole: public prosecution.
- : open to all persons: a public meeting.
- : of, relating to, or being in the service of a community or nation, especially as a government officer: a public official.
- : maintained at the public expense and under public control: a public library; a public road.
- : generally known: The fact became public.
- : familiar to the public; prominent: public figures.
- : open to the view of all; existing or conducted in public: a public dispute.
- : pertaining or devoted to the welfare or well-being of the community: public spirit.
- : of or relating to all humankind; universal.
- 1
- : the people constituting a community, state, or nation.
- : a particular group of people with a common interest, aim, etc.: the book-buying public.
- : British Informal. a tavern; public house.
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
Today, the solution that she built moves into public beta and will compete at TechCrunch Disrupt Battlefield with other startups for $100,000 and the Disrupt Cup.
The filings have been at the center of a legal fight between the impeached president and Democrats, who have demanded that he make the contents available to the American public.
During the most recent fiscal year, which ended in June, it rose again, to 314, according to the Cook County public guardian’s office.
No Silicon Valley startup has gone public yet this year, but that bleak stretch is about to end.
In 2015, the Obama-Biden administration orchestrated Mission Innovation, a compact among 20 countries to double public funding for energy RD&D over five years.
When cities started adding chlorine to their water supplies, in the early 1900s, it set off public outcry.
Not to be left behind, progressives in neighboring Wisconsin clamored to join the cutting edge of public health.
Just the hard-on before you shoot unarmed members of the public.
Great American leaders have long contributed profound thoughts of tremendous consequence to the public discourse.
Saved from the public gallows, Weeks was virtually exiled from the city, and wound up in Mississippi, where he raised a family.
As such it is now presented to the public for whatever meed of praise or censure it is found to deserve.
Five of the number had studied with Liszt before, and the young men are artists already before the public.
Many of these have been seen in the Corcoran Art Gallery and in other public exhibitions.
It was close upon twelve o'clock, and the "Rooms" had been open to the public for two hours.
It will be a busy session; and I want to see if I can't become a useful public man.