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publish

/puhb-lish/US // ˈpʌb lɪʃ //UK // (ˈpʌblɪʃ) //

发布,出版,发表,公布

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to issue for sale or distribution to the public.
    • : to issue publicly the work of: Random House publishes Faulkner.
    • : to submit online, as to a message board or blog: I published a comment on her blog post with examples from my own life.They publish a new webcomic once a month.
    • : to announce formally or officially; proclaim; promulgate.
    • : to make publicly or generally known.
    • : Law. to communicate to some person or persons other than the person defamed.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to issue newspapers, books, computer software, etc.; engage in publishing: The new house will start to publish next month.
    • : to have one's work published: She has decided to publish with another house.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • A study recently published in Environmental Research Letters showed that fall days with fire weather have doubled because of climate change.

  • In July the government published details of rescue funding for struggling universities, but made clear that any bailout would come with tough conditions.

  • They described their work in a recent paper published in the journal Analytical Methods.

  • Fifty years ago this week, the New York Times Sunday Magazine published an essay by the Nobel prize-winning economist Milton Friedman.

  • In June 2018, ProPublica Illinois published an investigation that revealed hundreds of children in state care were confined in psychiatric hospitals after they completed their treatment.

  • You have to talk to your people before they hear from other people and you have to publish before other people publish.

  • What made you want to publish a memoir at this stage of your career?

  • Brill went on to publish his piece in Time, where it won a National Magazine Award.

  • Her nervousness about its content made her decide to publish it under a pseudonym, for reasons that would later become clear.

  • Ultimately they would go ahead along with the Washington Post and publish a host of revelations from the Snowden cache.

  • M. de Bourlac was enabled to publish his great work on the "Spirit of Modern Law."

  • I find, too, that at Lisbon they can publish false news, as well as in some other countries in Europe.

  • I shall not alter a single note, I replied, I shall publish the work precisely as it stands.

  • But he did not publish the sonnets until a long time afterwards, and with a success that the author declared to be posthumous.

  • Each house of the General Assembly must keep a journal of its proceedings and must publish it from time to time.

publish - EE Dictionary | EE Dictionary