verb

definition

To issue (something, such as printed work) for distribution and/or sale.

example

Most of the sketches Faulkner published in 1925 appeared in the Sunday magazine section of the New Orleans Times-Picayune.

definition

To announce to the public.

example

No newspaper published the victim's name.

definition

To issue the work of (an author).

example

Grove Press published many avant-garde authors.

definition

To disseminate (a message) publicly via a newsgroup, forum, blog, etc.

definition

To issue a medium (e.g. publication).

example

Major city papers still publish daily.

definition

To have one's work accepted for a publication.

example

She needs to publish in order to get tenure.

definition

(of content) To be made available in a printed publication or other medium.

example

The article first published online, then in print the next day.

definition

To convert data of a Web page to HTML in a local directory and copy it to the Web site on a remote system.

Examples of publish in a Sentence

He wondered what she would think if she knew he had never tried to publish a single piece of music.

Then that person might choose to publish those results and others could verify them.

She had bought property in America and thought of moving thither, but chance or fatality made her determine to publish De l'Allemagne in Paris.

Franklin's works were not collected in his own lifetime, and he made no effort to publish his writings.

I am thankful for the opportunity to publish this on my web site.

Upon his promise not to publish the letters Franklin received permission to send them to Massachusetts, where they were much passed about and were printed, and they were soon republished in English newspapers.

In 1688, when James reissued his "Declaration of Indulgence," Ken was one of the "seven bishops" who refused to publish it.

While at Geneva he taught a blind girl several branches of science, and also how to write; and this led him to publish A Method of Teaching Mathematics to the Blind.

The sheriffs were ordered to publish the revised charter on the 22nd of February 1218.

Further state aid enabled him to visit Germany and France in 1825, and having visited the astronomer Heinrich Schumacher (1780-1850) at Hamburg, he spent six months in Berlin, where he became intimate with August Leopold Crelle, who was then about to publish his mathematical journal.

In 1611 he began to publish his works.

The discovery that the poet had printed secretly 1500 copies of The Patriot King caused him to publish a correct version in 1749, and stirred up a further altercation with Warburton, who defended his friend against Bolingbroke's bitter aspersions, the latter, whose conduct was generally reprehended, publishing a Familiar Epistle to the most Impudent Man Living.

The first attack upon the aristocracy proceeded from a young noble named Cylon, who endeavoured to become tyrant about 630 B.C. The people helped to crush this movement; yet discontent must have been rife among them, for in 621 the Eupatrids commissioned Draco, a junior magistrate, to draft and publish a code of criminal law.

Do not publish your address on the Internet.

Henceforth it was impossible to publish or to utter a word which might offend the despots of church or state; and the Italians had to amuse their leisure with the polite triflings of academics.

This proposal, which was sent through the medium of the German minister to Mexico, von Eckhardt, was intercepted in America, and President Wilson was in a position to publish it on March I 1917.

Their decision not to publish them is not only cowardly, it is also hypocritical.

They cost a great deal to publish and they have not a large enough sale to make them profitable to the publisher; but there are several institutions with special funds to pay for embossed books.

If you can't find someone to publish your photos, then do the job yourself.

Never publish your birth date on the Internet.

Then he was liable to be seized and put to death as a pestilent heretic. There only remained to draft and publish the edict containing the ban.

About the year 1893 he began to publish short stories, some of which, such as Enris, The Fortress of Matthias, The Old Man of Korpela and Finland's Flag, are delicate works of art, while they reveal to a very interesting degree the temper and ambitions of the contemporary Finnish population.

Mill, which he had intended to supplement by further articles, and eventually publish in a volume as a criticism of Mill's philosophy.

Miguel, and the council of regency at first refused to publish the charter.

Thus the greater liberty which he granted to the press enabled the Bohemians to publish a newspaper in the national language.

The supervisor, two of the justices of the peace and the clerk constitute the township board, whose duty it is to settle claims against the township, audit accounts, and publish annually an itemized statement of receipts and disbursements.

Nordenskiold in 1786 to collect documents about Swedenborg and to publish his writings.

Before each audit the auditor gives notice of the time and place appointed, and the council publish the appointment by advertisement.

He continued to publish from time to time, in the magazines, poems which showed a clearness of vision and a perfection of workmanship such as he never had equalled at any period of his life.

The receipts and expenditure are estimated for biennial periods, but it has not been customary to publish detailed results.

Six months were allowed by Bernoulli for the solution of the problem, and in the event of none being sent to him he promised to publish his own.

On the 20th of January 1692 Le Clerc announced to Locke his intention to publish the pamphlet in Latin; and, upon the intimation of this to Sir Isaac, he entreated him " to stop the translation and impression as soon as he could, for he designed to suppress them."

He survived to publish his translation of the.Bible and to die in peace in December 1383.

He mentally constructed a system of universal law; and, when, at the end of his captivity, he accompanied his pupils, the sons of Coyet, to the university, of Leiden, he was enabled to publish, in 1661, the fruits of his reflections under the title of Elementa jurisprudentiae universalis, libri duo.

The Armenians are equally strict; but (adds Rycaut) " the times seem so confused and without rule that they can scarce be recounted, unless by those who live amongst them, and strictly observe them, it being the chief care of the priest, whose learning principally consists in knowing the appointed times of fasting and feasting, the which they never omit on Sundays to publish unto the people."

Murray could not publish Aylmer Papillon, but he had great hopes of its boyish writer (Isaac D'Israeli was an old friend of his), "took him into his confidence, and related to him his experiences of men and affairs."

Thomas Henderson (1798-1844) had indeed measured the larger displacements of a Centauri at the Cape in 1832-1833, but delayed until 1839 to publish his result.

A state board of arbitration, composed of two farmers, two employers and two employes is authorized to investigate the causes of any strike affecting the public interests, and publish what it finds to be the facts in the case, together with recommendations for settlement.

A new series of Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect appeared in 1862, and he was persuaded in 1868 to publish a series of Poems of Rural Life in Common English, which was less successful than his dialect poems. These latter were collected into a single volume in 1879, and on the 7th of October 1886 Barnes died at Winterborne Came.

The New England Homestead (weekly; published by the Orange Judd Company), Farm and Home, a semi-monthly, and Good Housekeeping, a monthly (published by the Phelps Publishing Company), and the Kindergarten Review (monthly, published by the MiltonBradley Company, who publish other educational matter) are important periodicals.

At the time of the Popish Plot in 1678 he displayed some moderation, refusing to believe the charges made against the duke of York, though he chose this time to publish some anti-Roman pamphlets.

He, too, began to draw up objections to the Aristotelian philosophy, but did not at first venture to publish them.

His chief work is his edition of the Biographia Britannica, of which, however, he only lived to publish 5 vols.

Macdonnell at once admitted through the newspapers that he had in his possession letters (rumoured to be " embarrassing " to the Unionist leaders) which he might publish at his own discretion; and the discussion as to how far his appointment by Mr Wyndham had prejudiced the Unionist cause was reopened in public with much bitterness, in view of the anticipation of further steps in the Home Rule direction by the Liberal ministry.

This explains why the author did not publish his work immediately, but placed it where he hoped it would be safely preserved till opportunity should arise for its publication.

Swift, in his reply, abused him for his want of manners in giving a gentleman the lie, answered his arguments seriatim, and declared that the evidence of the publication of another almanac was wholly irrelevant, "for Gadbury, Poor Robin, Dove and Way do yearly publish their almanacs, though several of them have been dead since before the Revolution."

The sultan refused to publish the scheme of reforms, and massacre followed massacre in Armenia in quick succession until the 1st of January 1896.

In 1843 he became a member of the musical club who called themselves "The Juvenals," and for their meetings were written the trios and duets, music and words, which Wennerberg began to publish in 1846.

In 1874 he began to publish his translation of the Bible, La Bible, nouvelle traduction avec commentaire.

Indeed, he was really the originator of the new movement, but hesitated to publish the results of his studies.

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