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[ US /pəˈbɫɪsəti, pəˈbɫɪsɪti/ ]
[ UK /pʌblˈɪsɪti/ ]
NOUN
  1. the quality of being open to public view
    the publicity of the court room
  2. a message issued in behalf of some product or cause or idea or person or institution
    the packaging of new ideas

How To Use publicity In A Sentence

  • The immediate postwar years had brought a great deal of national publicity to Carville.
  • There was a lot of negative publicity surrounding the film.
  • Hamed will go on a publicity tour around the States next week before entering training camp on February 16.
  • All the pieces, from casting to production to publicity to marketing have to work.
  • He got a huge amount of publicity and attention. Times, Sunday Times
  • California founded the celebrity culture, and as publicity stunts go, running for governor is on the cheap and easy side of the spectrum.
  • The case has attracted wide publicity.
  • In view of the publicity already given to these subjects, it is necessary to note in fuller detail two matters connected with the health of the Canadian troops at Salisbury Plain – namely, the outbreak of cerebro-spinal fever and the veneral situation. War Story of the Canadian Army Medical Corps
  • The publicity would still be there and people would still be writing about us. Times, Sunday Times
  • News organizations were quick to defend their policies, and some competitors saw the Fox announcement as a potential grab for publicity.
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