How To Use Publicize In A Sentence

  • Since 1975, landmines have killed over a million people, far outstripping the deaths caused by those well-publicized bugaboos, nuclear, chemical and biological weapons.
  • But it did it and I'm quite surprised that the celebration, the bicentenary of this amazing event was not more widely publicised - it did appear in one of the English newspapers.
  • A large company contracted me to publicize its newest division.
  • A wide belt publicizes a big gut, so keep that it mind.
  • In a well publicised case a patient recently committed suicide while under the care of a clinical ecologist.
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  • He also plays solo when he can - though sometimes these gigs aren't publicised widely.
  • The whole book has the feel of being a retread of issues that have already been quite well publicised.
  • Incarceration is a well-publicized feature of the American system, and is available too in other jurisdictions.
  • There the Africans stood trial for piracy and murder in a much publicized case, even for that day.
  • He is the undisputed backbench champion of the well-publicized empty gesture.
  • Business is booming for an Avis franchisee in the Carolinas despite well-publicized allegations of racial discrimination against customers.
  • This 'bloody baboonery', as the communists called the highly publicized police performance, was preceded by inspired press reports of evidence - more sensational than the notorious Zinoviev letter, - of a revolutionary plot directed from Moscow to prepare the way for the black republic. Class & Colour in South Africa - Chapter 18
  • Mollie Steimer, a leading anarchist and advocate for the rights of political prisoners, was a codefendant in one of the most publicized antiradical trials in American history. Mollie Steimer.
  • Taiwan should only agree to the torch route on the condition that Taiwan is seen as an international route and not a domestic route and leave it to China to accept or refect this offer...of course China will reject it but this will make China look uncompliant rather than Taiwan and also publicize Taiwan's quest for official independance. IHT: Taiwan Refuses Olympic Torch
  • This is a column about New Labour's complete failure to publicise its many progressive achievements, while screeching out its reactionary policies in a ceaseless wail.
  • He subsequently traveled to The Hague to make more emollient, if less publicized, remarks.
  • They've worked night and day to publicise their campaign.
  • All relevant departments will co - operate to publicise this MPF system which affects the general public.
  • Her recent speech was merely a restatement of her widely publicised views.
  • Do you think specific arts events should receive public funding, or are you unhappy about gay sexuality being publicised.
  • On two separate but very well publicized occasions Errol Flynn was accused of statutory rape.
  • According to jazz historian Leonard Feather, “Joe Marsala was responsible in his quiet and unpublicized way for more attempts at breaking down segregation in jazz than Benny Goodman.” A Renegade History of the United States
  • • U.S. immediately endorses American passports as nonvalid for travel to Hungary, which of course involves cancellation of Porgy and Bess visita much publicized State Department project. Enemies of the People
  • The underfinanced, little-publicized campaign of Mr. Kennedy, 38, is not likely to get many votes on Tuesday.
  • The work of the charity has been widely publicized throughout the media.
  • Designed to handle shared medium-access or point-to-point connections, Ethernet has recently taken a well-publicized leap into metro networking.
  • The State Forest Administration will set up 150 observation stations nationwide and publicise any outbreaks of animal disease that could threaten human health.
  • The most publicized was Nebraska running back Lawrence Phillips, who is on probation after assaulting a former girlfriend.
  • Back in 2002, in a much-publicized debacle, the copy-protection scheme Sony used was undermined in a decidedly low-tech way: You simply needed to draw a line around the CD with a magic marker.
  • In fact, the point of a googlebomb is to acheive the googlebomb and then publicize it: "Look, if you search for 'more evil than satan,' you get the Microsoft home-page, hardy-har-har. Boing Boing: May 23, 2004 - May 29, 2004 Archives
  • Open ID will only be open to phishing if it contains sensitive, potentially stealable, information; and if you publicise that, even via blogger or wordpress profiles, then you're a nitwit who deserves whatever you get. Why would you use OpenID?
  • In fact, the final outcome of the vote, like that of a slightly more publicized election, was delayed by absentee votes and a recount of contested ballots.
  • It would also help if he had been engaged in a much publicised and bitter battle with the Prime Minister.
  • The most widely publicized plastic-bullet injury was a neck injury where a young man will likely never speak again.
  • In those first vital hours, the police decided to publicise the raid as much as possible in a bid to make the stolen pictures too hot to handle.
  • The last publicized stigmatic was Padre Pio, a Capuchin monk in Italy who gained world recognition as a faith healer and confessor. TOUCH
  • The next day the picture of the lorry was in a number of newspapers, and, although they blanked the register and name out, they still publicised the company.
  • Of course there are highly publicised stories of high profile cons being attacked i. e Huntly, but in the main, cons just want to get on with their sentence and get the hell out of there and if scoring some smack from a beastie helps dull the process then they WILL associate with them. on January 29, 2007 at 11: 02 am | Reply Notacriminal Silly Me « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • I'm not usually the kind of person who publicises the private contents of emails sent to me via this site.
  • The conference voted to put a list of questions over the war to every candidate in the election, to publicise the results and to hold hustings over the war.
  • Several airlines are experimenting with selling tickets in cyberspace via silent auctions or last-minute fare deals publicized by e-mail.
  • Several airlines are experimenting with selling tickets in cyberspace via silent auctions or last-minute fare deals publicized by e-mail.
  • Unless publicised, even quality stuff at competitive prices may not have many takers.
  • He had no sooner recovered from this than he underwent abdominal surgery for ileitis, and then at the very beginning of his second term in November of 1957, he suffered a stroke, and so again he seemed an extremely inappropriate president because of these three well-publicized illnesses. The Mortal Presidency: Illness and Anguish in the White House
  • The highly publicized abortion debate overshadowed the rest of the platform that calls for a smorgasbord of constitutional amendments.
  • The reason it doesn't work is that the publishers do actually perform quite a useful service: they edit the book, then they publicise it.
  • Once again the press enthusiastically publicised these scurrilous claims.
  • Neither do monetary policy measures publicized under the heading of stabilization imply a constancy of purchasing power.
  • Despite a small number of highly publicised cases, most people suffering psychiatric disease are no more likely to cause aggro than you or me. The Sun
  • The book has also been publicized by many conservative groups as a fundraiser.
  • Her Adidas tennis dresses and her own much-publicised line of sport bras are making her millions.
  • The last most publicised case was in tsarist Russia in 1911-13 when Menahem Mendel Beilis, a foreman in a brickyard and a non-practising Jew, was charged with the murder of a 13-year-old boy, Andrei Yushchinsky. Letters: The Beilis blood libel
  • He does not want to publicise the fact that he carries large quantities of cash on his person in case he becomes a target for thieves.
  • Yet despite highly publicised anti-truancy initiatives - which have even included telephone hotlines urging the public to report truanting pupils - non-attendance still remains at crisis point.
  • The last publicized stigmatic was Padre Pio, a Capuchin monk in Italy who gained world recognition as a faith healer and confessor. TOUCH
  • Tensions have been simmering since the breakout in June, when inmates marched out of the compound into the local town to publicise their grievances.
  • We want to publicise the struggles of those who are organising against oppression and exploitation.
  • In perfect irony, one of them was seen pasting posters on the pedestal of the Kamaraj statue to publicise an agitation in the city on Tuesday.
  • One of the saddest and most galling aspects of this foot and mouth tragedy has been the relentless, silent, unpublicised invasion of our shop shelves by imported meat.
  • Crufts remains the biggest dog show in the world, and it's about much more than the highly publicised "best of breed" type of judging in the showring. Telegraph Blogs
  • Less publicized trends are visible in the realm of low-rise multifamily residential architecture.
  • The last most publicised case was in tsarist Russia in 1911-13 when Menahem Mendel Beilis, a foreman in a brickyard and a non-practising Jew, was charged with the murder of a 13-year-old boy, Andrei Yushchinsky. Letters: The Beilis blood libel
  • The theft seems to have been an internal job involving a security guard, but no prosecution followed and the thefts went unpublicised.
  • So rest assured that while we're eager to show our appreciation we would never publicize anyone's name without their explicit permission.
  • This new artistic trend has been publicized and sanctified by the great determiner of what's hot and who's who, the Whitney Biennial; by galleries across Canada and the US; and by the art sections in independent booksellers.
  • Respondent United States Senator publicizes examples of wasteful governmental spending by awarding his "Golden Fleece of the Month Award.
  • As I said, we are open to anyone who wants to publicise any cause so long as their basic belief is non-violence and peace.
  • This is still in decline outside China, partly because of those well publicised cheap exports. Times, Sunday Times
  • For every horror story that makes headlines, countless others go unpublicised. Times, Sunday Times
  • The more oxygen they are given to publicise their views, the more the British people will choke on their bigotry and hatred. Times, Sunday Times
  • Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, on Tuesday to confront him about the accusations, which he had seized upon and publicized.
  • Among recent, well-publicized cases is that of a United Airlines passenger from Connecticut who, swacked out of his mind and cut off from the airline's hooch, defecated on a food cart.
  • What wasn't publicized was the ignobility of young Merritt's poverty. A Girl's Legs Stirring The Air
  • Microsoft started to publicise details of Microsoft Office 2010, aka Office 14*, at its Worldwide Partner Conference in New Orleans today.
  • In spite of well-publicized increases in obesity, diabetes and other maladies, Americans in general are living longer, healthier lives.
  • The administrative rulings on classification made by Customs shall be publicized.
  • But this was the party to publicise the launch of the Spice Girls new album.
  • The competition is the largest of its kind in the country and is publicised nationwide.
  • A much publicized raid on a yardie stronghold had first been simulated at Riot City
  • Police decided to publicise the robbery as much as possible in an effort to make the paintings too hot to handle.
  • The Left Book Club was serving to publicize Communist ideology.
  • And the mushrooming of the USA defence budget has been encouraged by arms manufacturers .. with nary a word of publicised protest. Pundits and why you can’t believe them — Fusion Despatches
  • When Russians talk of their politicians, they frequently speak of "thieves," "bandits," and "swindlers" — and not hyperbolically: the presence of criminals in the Duma is a well-publicized fact. Russia Is Finished
  • However, he would not identify the pub concerned, because its owner -- a pubco that is a client of The Cloud's -- had not yet given their permission for the case to be publicised ... Boing Boing
  • While they promulgating the Christianity , English was also publicized in China.
  • And all this despite widely publicised security fears over Net banking.
  • Attitudes seem to be changing as a result of recent highly publicized cases of sexual harassment.
  • Analysts – who had previously pressed Apple to publicise its CEO succession plan, without success – said that Cook was a safe pair of hands, but wondered whether the company would have the same drive.
  • A blue plaque fastened into the wall publicises the office's past as the dining room in the home of journalist Henry Morton Stanley.
  • They'll trumpet their exemplar's views when he says too much gothic severity hardens the heart, but probably don't care to publicise such statements as this.
  • All relevant departments will co - operate to publicise this MPF system which affects the general public.
  • Less publicized trends are visible in the realm of low-rise multifamily residential architecture.
  • Animal welfare laws are strictly enforced in the countries abroad and the press also publicises animal abuses very widely, owing to which cases of cruelty to animals are very few, she says.
  • On one hand this study, inspired by the highly publicised murder of Kitty Genovese in 1964, is mentioned in every textbook and often dubbed 'seminal'.
  • The MRF headquarters just waited for the right moment to publicise the matter as much as possible.
  • Accompanying these changes in substance has been a new Chinese campaign to publicize and promote the country's foreign policy.
  • An industry that is endorsed and publicised by endless smiling celebrities and generally an accepted part of modern life: cosmetic surgery. Times, Sunday Times
  • One of the first well-publicised examples occurred in 2006 when pictures of a well-dressed woman killing a kitten with her stiletto heel were posted on the internet.
  • In an unpublicised ruling last week, the High Court agreed to her appeal against suspension from the Roll.
  • The moment the debate was publicized on the Internet, it was globalized.
  • And I can imagine the farmers' fears at the moment, mainly because we experienced a similar, smaller and unpublicised scare last year.
  • Much-publicized progress so far includes the restocking of wildlife species in Mozambique, involving, for example, a US$20-million project to "translocate" elephants from South Africa's Kruger Park to Mozambique's Limpopo National Park (formerly Coutada 16). Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • If I tour New York it will be to publicize Lord of Darkness not to be photographed smiling at your elbow. MIDNIGHT IS A LONELY PLACE
  • First there were the highly publicized congressional hearings on steroids in professional baseball.
  • An environmental center offers education courses to government officers, businesses, agriculturalists, school students and the public, and a news-sheet, radio and TV are used to publicise conservation. Uvs Nuur Basin, Russian Federation, Republic of Tuva and Mongolia
  • No matter which medium is chosen for advertising, ads must exist in order to be publicized.
  • Ironically, this comes primarily as a result of his unshakeable obstinacy in taking the governing body to task earlier this season over his well-publicised fine for comments made about referee Dougie McDonald.
  • Details of the enhanced scheme, which pays for former prime ministers' private offices, are disclosed in previously unpublicised parliamentary papers deposited in the House of Commons library.
  • This family has been widely publicised as suffering primarily from a defect in the use of grammatical suffixation rules, thus supposedly supporting the existence of genes specific to grammar.
  • This would be an ideal opportunity for local producers to publicise their products to the Parisian and French Markets.
  • Publicized research on Adventists' health "has helped bring some objective evaluation of Adventism... particularly all up and down the West Coast," said G. Adventists' back-to-basics faith is fastest growing U.S. church
  • Suspicions began to develop when several people tried to set up a photocall with the local press to publicise its success.
  • Already the no side has developed a significant head of steam with multiple and well-publicised launches and high-profile figures involved.
  • This is still in decline outside China, partly because of those well publicised cheap exports. Times, Sunday Times
  • As a rule, memoirs written by political figures do not remain memorable since the details supplied in them must have been widely publicised by the media long before they got into the book.
  • She indeed went through several "disintoxication cures" (three, in fact) over a period of several decades, the most widely publicized being the one she underwent at the American Hospital in Neuilly in 1982. 'In Love with Duras'
  • Wu, who was named vice foreign minister for Asian affairs last Friday after a stint as ambassador to Japan, arrived in Seoul on an unpublicized trip Sunday for talks with South Korean officials, Yonhap said.
  • Coessential change not only the journalist that perplexing Chongqing and reader, still perplexing Chongqing city to be in charge of the governmental official that news publicizes .
  • The video was recorded in an undercover investigation at Conklin Dairy Farms Inc., said Mercy For Animals, a not-for-profit group that publicizes what it calls cruel practices in the dairy, meat and egg industries and promotes a vegan diet. Conklin Dairy Farms Video Shows Dairy Cows Being Violently Abused, Says Mercy For Animals (VIDEO)
  • Attitudes seem to be changing as a result of recent highly publicized cases of sexual harassment.
  • No, any more than Bill O'Reilly and Rupert Murdock caused the jihadist attack on a physician who had violated a terrorist's religious sensibilities -- or, for that matter, any more than jihadist websites that publicize the "blasphemies" perpetrated by the United States cause alienated young men to become suicide bombers against us or our allies. Drew Westen: Gun Violence and the Lessons of Tucson: Will the Chambers Once Again Be Loaded Against the American People?
  • Marsh is relying on the corporate clients of its parent company to publicise its service, and expects that employees will view it as an additional voluntary benefit.
  • The recent well publicised survey of public opinion showed a clear preference for treatment in centres of excellence.
  • Thanks to an exhaustive coverup, one of the biggest disasters in football history is also one of its least publicised. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ironically, this comes primarily as a result of his unshakeable obstinacy in taking the governing body to task earlier this season over his well-publicised fine for comments made about referee Dougie McDonald.
  • The trade union movement did not widely publicise the dispute, so that workers outside the immediate area knew little or nothing about the strike.
  • Business is booming for an Avis franchisee in the Carolinas despite well-publicized allegations of racial discrimination against customers.
  • The author appeared on television to publicize her latest book.
  • The Beamer family later publicized the passengers' courageous behavior, and Beamer's words soon became a catch phrase symbolizing the nation's resolve.
  • Then this year McDonald's agreed to pay $8.5 million to settle a lawsuit over its unpublicized delays in efforts to eliminate trans-fatty acids from the process.
  • Another hotly disputed issue that has been well publicised is the council's role in planning applications.
  • In the last few days he has given two unpublicised talks to meetings in Scotland at which he has rebuked the Executive for failing to curb the car by investing in public transport.
  • The media could publicise the event and help provide additional funding for a worthwhile monument to enhance York's beauty.
  • A wide belt publicizes a big gut, so keep that it mind.
  • • Unpublicised E coli outbreak leaves 250 ill and one dead was corrected because one reference said that 74 people were treated for haemolytic uraemic syndrome. Corrections and clarifications
  • But to my surprise, when I bought my ticket to watch this year's show at the August 2010 Sussex County Fair, a giant signboard boldly publicized Dobbs's sponsorship. Isabel Macdonald: The Dobbs & Pony Show: Snapshots of America's Immigration Hypocrisy
  • National council decisions aren't usually publicised to members, so this information is only trickling out to members slowly.
  • The last publicized stigmatic was Padre Pio, a Capuchin monk in Italy who gained world recognition as a faith healer and confessor. TOUCH
  • I called you here, because I need you to help me publicize a new development. FURTHER TALES OF THE CITY
  • But the idea does not seem to be wholly to greet the teams because these companies also publicise their products on these banners.
  • The company has publicised a customer charter to make the euro conversion process as transparent and easy as possible for its customers.
  • In addition, there have been well-publicised harbingers both of incipient ethnic conflict and of strong mass opposition to a long-term US military presence and a US-chosen Iraqi Government.
  • Publicize and consult in all kinds of local tax laws and regulations on foreign enterprises, servicing for the taxpaying.
  • The decision had crept under the leadership's radar - many did not know anything about it - until Scotland on Sunday uncovered the unpublicised release of the council's new guidelines to schools.
  • The organization worked diligently to publicize the doctrine, distributing pamphlets on just war and the right to conscientiously object to unjust wars.
  • But this was the party to publicise the launch of the Spice Girls new album.
  • The team has made an offer to re-sign Antonio Cromartie, but the process had been clouded by the club's weeklong, highly publicized pursuit of Nnamdi Asomugha. Jets Quietly Win the Burress Bowl
  • In perfect irony, one of them was seen pasting posters on the pedestal of the Kamaraj statue to publicise an agitation in the city on Tuesday.
  • Earth-science techniques applicable to archaeology have been successfully publicised during the year.
  • Her recent speech was merely a restatement of her widely publicised views.
  • It was an unpublicised, spontaneous act of generosity. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is unfortunate that newspapers publicise the few negative incidents rather than the many positive ones.
  • Florida made it a point to widely publicize this intimidating fact again this year - until stopped by a court.
  • The proposal has been widely publicised in BBC-TV press information circulars sent to 1,800 newspapers.
  • While largely unpublicized, this rate is probably a better measurement of the kind of unemployment and underemployment that affects many families and drives their attitudes about the economy. Notable
  • Grand force is planning to undertook be publicized first emission 2005.
  • Most indie films, with little to no money to publicize their films, rely on intimate knowledge of their niche markets.
  • Several spoke about the need for more and better publicised youth facilities, an end to segregation in schools, and the problem of drug dealers in their communities.
  • A publicized video of Canadians' brutal slaughtering of seals was released last week, revealing Taiwan's status as the fourth-largest importer of seal oil in the world.
  • They sign a contract to present one performance of their work in April, and to help sell tickets and publicize the event.
  • A less-publicized part of the new regulation is what some experts are most interested in: the mandatory disclosure of the amount of water needed to frack each well.
  • Do you like the idea - do you support the idea of these kinds of widely publicized alerts?
  • When I thumbed through his journal at the shop today I had the strong feeling that he never intended for these thoughts to be publicised.
  • Contrary to the impression created by the doom-mongers, there has been a dramatic decline in smoking since the dangers first became widely publicized.
  • That's the intriguing premise of a highly publicized study this year by Brian Knutson, an assistant professor in the psychology department at Stanford University, and four colleagues.
  • The highly publicized, well-financed opposition to the controversial Cape Wind project off Nantucket Sound “is an anomaly,” Kempton said. Offshore Wind: The Best Energy Investment America Could Make?
  • Jack D: Meanwhile, the snitch Yelena Shagall has come off relatively unpublicized and unscathed. The Volokh Conspiracy » Be Careful. Trust No-One. Shut Up.
  • It is not uncommon for much-publicised programmes to end up as non-events in the State.
  • A big noise was caused by a publicized Concept of celebration, adopted by the city administration, which included a strange passage saying that one of the goals of the whole festivities is “sacralization of Astana” - and a week before the Day X, the parliament made July 6th a state holiday! Kazakhs Ambivalent about Capital's Anniversary
  • Secretary Peter Kay said members had resorted to sticking information notices of their own on bus stops as the partnership and bus operators had failed to properly publicise diversion routes.
  • Quite a lot of us derive our patchy understanding of globalisation from such well - publicised high jinks.
  • He says a destructively crazy thing, the media abettors publicize it, and here we are.
  • Maybe you have a product or service to sell, an organization or cause to promote, or a celebrity or politician to publicize.
  • Yasushi Oohama, who coordinates moves from Fukushima for the Okinawa prefectural office, says his office has received over 250 inquiries about the package, which was first publicized on the Okinawa prefecture website in June, and that around 61 families have applied for the deal, with many slated to move in August. Okinawa Beckons to Nuclear Refugees
  • They changed the subject by noting their prosecution of some highly publicized cases against the Klan and other white supremacist organizations.
  • Salisbury Rotary Club members went poolside last Friday to publicise the club's first ever fundraising swimathon, planned for April.
  • It was, you know, publicized that I was "disinherited," that I was shocked at what I received. CNN Transcript Mar 14, 2008
  • On Saturday, on his return from his brief and much publicised flying visit home to England, he repeated the message to a higher authority.
  • He suffered a loss of prestige when the scandal was publicized.
  • In fact, one of the most publicized disapproving voices has arisen from the band itself.
  • He issued a decree appealing to his ministers in the capital and in the provinces to publicize his reform edicts, in the hope that Chinese public opinion would rally to his support.
  • This is still in decline outside China, partly because of those well publicised cheap exports. Times, Sunday Times
  • He likes to portray himself as helping to publicize a groundswell of popular discontent at the demise of American manufacturing.
  • The original idea of establishing a team and an office to promote, publicize and create books from the expeditions, soon evolved into the Luo Ben store.
  • The unpublicized trip to the United States by South Korea's head of intelligence organization that started Sunday raised speculation Kim may visit Seoul much earlier than expected.
  • The author appeared on television to publicize her latest book.
  • This front far outstripped the more publicized Manchurian front and soon became of nationwide importance.
  • Once it became publicized, the bureau's gaffe generated much clucking and snide comment on the nature of incompetence.
  • Since 1992 extra emergency sessions have been held to deal with widely publicized human rights crises.
  • With a solid cast, respected director and the well-publicised loan of 30 Marks & Spencer suits for the cast during the run, hamminess, togas and thickly applied make-up have no place in this production.
  • Getting this thing off the ground and integrating it into the civic culture involved the kind of multi-group cooperation that warms the soul: Hassel, reacting to a casual discussion among friends about how helpful some easy-to-access basic instruction would be to most dog owners, approached the town leaders, who voted to let the monthly sessions be held in a municipal training room and publicize them on the town website. Pet Talk: Be a Responsible Dog Owner
  • With that in mind, I have decided not to try to beat them, but to join them, and have fired off a number of suggested quiz posers to be bought and used on a programme I am not allowed to publicise here.
  • It is alleged that at least four businessmen, and possibly more, who made unpublicised loans to the Labour Party were subsequently nominated for peerages by Tony Blair.
  • In order to check against any kind of bias in the ICT's methodology, I asked their researcher to apply it to a more recent and highly publicized incident.
  • The closures have meant gridlock in places, but pre-planned highways contingencies have been put into operation and diversionary routes publicised where possible.
  • Starting in the summer of 1989, several gendarmes publicized their grievances in anonymous letters to the press.
  • The irony is that the most effective work is discreet and unpublicised. Times, Sunday Times
  • Having widely publicised their plan to EPO test in Edmonton, the athletics body has provided drugs cheats the necessary time needed to purge their system of the blood-boosting substance.
  • Many sites are backed by companies whose primary purpose is to publicize or sell medications, products, or devices.
  • A highly publicised investigation of Hollywood in 1947 resulted in prison sentences for a group of unbending witnesses, writers and filmmakers who came to be known as the ‘Hollywood Ten’.
  • One of the most widely publicized cases, involving two clinics in North Jakarta, occurred in March.
  • I am totally unconvinced that these people understand or embrace anything, but are too often just looking to self-aggrandise and self-publicise their way to their personal nirvana. I’m Here For An Argument. No You’re Not! Yes I am! « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • He suffered a loss of prestige when the scandal was publicized.
  • The lamentable standard of their equipment is widely publicised.
  • To enhance the publicity on internet, they publicized on Campus BBS.
  • Members of the Rastafari community in Barbados set up a blog, AfriKa CRY BLOOD, to publicise their efforts to seek justice in the Maloney case, demanding an independent investigation. Global Voices in English » Barbados: Questions about Maloney inquest verdict
  • Ha Cong Tuan, an environmental affairs official, called on Vietnamese medical researchers to study what he called the "rumor" that rhino horn cures cancer and then publicize their findings. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • The protestors have begun a poster campaign to publicise their case.
  • *The unibrow is a permissible topic because Kentucky fans Ohio State Buckeyes Jared Sullinger wanted to publicize his weight loss. CNN.com
  • To their credit, like Israeli officials, mainstream American Jewish leaders condemned the price tag vigilantes after the widely publicized defacement of a mosque in Israel proper last week. Dan Fleshler: How Extremist Israeli Settlers Celebrate the Harvest Festival
  • In the last week of June, a defense attaché and a political officer from the US Embassy in New Delhi made an unpublicised visit to Jammu and Kashmir.
  • Restoring empty homes offers a hefty but unpublicised tax perk.
  • Customers can publicize their products and services without necessarily selling anything.
  • Ensure that agreement has been reached with the libraries about making documents available for consultation before this facility is publicised.
  • She publicized her fury at the government with a rebuke unprecedented and unrepeated in the history of the British constitutional monarchy.
  • Some local authority officers have been reluctant to place residents in Southern Cross homes because of its widely publicised financial plight. Southern Cross seeks £100m cash injection to avoid collapse
  • Several airlines are experimenting with selling tickets in cyberspace via silent auctions or last-minute fare deals publicized by e-mail.
  • The much-publicised case of Samit Patel is instructive, for no one would accuse Mike Newell, his county coach, of not being cognisant of the requirements and endeavouring to encourage him into what amounts to a lifestyle change. Cricketers today cannot afford to ape hard-living Ian Botham | Mike Selvey
  • The website aims to publicise Bruni's charity work as well as giving the world a glimpse of her life in the Elysee Palace with Sarkozy.
  • Thanks to an exhaustive coverup, one of the biggest disasters in football history is also one of its least publicised. Times, Sunday Times
  • Event sponsorship can also be used to publicize your product.
  • That the company's technology deficit should be so publicly acknowledged affirms that it longs to catch up: it doesn't usually publicize tactical withdrawals until long after the fact.
  • And anyway, by the late ’70s, Mr. Hockney had detoured in a half-dozen directions: theater sets and costume design, where the artist showed himself to be a virtuoso; photography, where he did not; and farragoes into Cubist collage, Chinese philosophy and “fax” drawings, as well as the artist’s crazily overpublicized theory that from the Renaissance onward, artists used optical devices to paint in perfect one-point perspective. The Unconfounding Delight of David Hockney
  • This widely publicised view of today's youth unfortunately makes some people generalise and view all teenagers in the same light.
  • a well publicized entrant is the pocket computer
  • Voters passed the Three Strikes Law as a response to several well-publicized horrors perpetrated by evil ex-cons who never should have been set free from prison.
  • * Publicise progress in availability of "specialised" drugs such as Diflucan, and drugs for TB and pneumonia, and encourage People ANC Daily News Briefing
  • The author appeared on television to publicize her latest book.
  • He is the author of a series of books which has rocketed him from his prolific but unpublicised status to the position of an international literary celebrity.
  • The remarks, although indiscreet, were far less damaging than those that had been publicised in rival papers through the week.
  • In particular, significant contractor deaths and injuries have largely remained uncounted and unpublicized by the U.S. government and the media. David Isenberg: War and Private Contractors: Can't Live with Them, Can't Live Without Them
  • Some threats to Mr Obama, whose Secret Service codename is Renegade, have been publicised, including an alleged plot by white supremacists in Tennessee late last year to rob a gun store, shoot 88 black people, decapitate another 14 and then assassinate the first black president in American history. Think Progress » Forgetting His Attacks On The Netroots, O’Reilly Says Media Are Using ‘Nuts’ To ‘Brand’ Tea Party As ‘Racists
  • In 1999, the NNCC publicized nationwide the advanced experience of Baotou and other cities and made arrangements for activities to establish "drug- free communities" across the country.
  • Then why play it up and publicise it and use teasers and wordy websites to give background info?
  • To publicize the results, Aktion Unverpackt published a guide showing where to buy milk products and drinks in refillable containers, along with unpackaged fruit and vegetables, eggs, cheese, meat, and bread.
  • Posters and leaflets are being distributed at Oldhams estate to publicise the terms of a court order banning the boy from terrorising residents.
  • Displaying the common sense and warped desire for fame of a Big Brother evictee, Ruby creates a blog to publicise her serial shoplifting in the persona of Robyn Hood, who donates stolen goods to charity shops. Summer reading for teenagers: darkness, danger and charity shops
  • It is imperative that townswomen across the country investigate, discuss, and publicise the need for new thinking on matters of social concern.
  • It was, and still is, a political product; a nifty, new gadget to be publicized, bartered and sold in exchange for ratings, revenue and of course, power. Adam Klugman: Mainstream Media... Occupy This!
  • Meanwhile, the snitch Yelena Shagall has come off relatively unpublicized and unscathed. The Volokh Conspiracy » Be Careful. Trust No-One. Shut Up.
  • The palace's insistence that the visit is not publicised until two weeks before has also caused problems.
  • While the administration this week begins a well-publicized Afghan "rollout" -- MyDD
  • The protest, though not well publicized, drew enthusiastic community support, with passing motorists honking their approval.
  • The money quote from that Army.ca thread: "Imagine the panic that will ensue when Mr Godfrey learns that we routinely land in small airports all over the country for unpublicized activities such as refuelling and eating lunch. C-130J in Canada
  • They cut their own salaries in order to afford a new hire - a business-development exec who could publicize the company and bring in new accounts.
  • We mounted a huge PR and advertising campaign designed to restore Americans' faith in managed care, which had taken a beating in the press for such well-publicized practices as "drive-through mastectomies" and "drive-though deliveries. Wendell Potter: The Insurers' Real Agenda for Change
  • Particularly after the dramatic and well-publicized cure of the journalist Harriet Martineau, interest escalated amongst the intellectual élite in therapeutic mesmerism and its use as an anaesthetic during surgery.
  • We want to publicise ourselves by basically streaking.
  • Are we all egocentric, narcissistic online exhibitionists who believe our lives are so important that they deserve to be publicised?
  • His oftentimes messy and disorganized decision-making process has been widely publicized, further eroding any appearance of strong decisive leadership.
  • His claims, that there was a link between the MMR vaccine and autism that was mediated by inflammatory bowel disease, were first publicised in 1998.
  • Despite the account being well publicized in all the papers, the mysterious disappearance had remained unexplained.
  • In Boulder last year, a highly publicized "streaking" incident has threatened to land the streakers on sex offender lists. Doyle Albee: Sex Offender Lists Need to be For Sex Offenders, Not Pranksters
  • The Equality and Human Rights Commission should publicise and enforce this.
  • Soviet missiles would be removed from Cuba in return for the unpublicized removal of missiles from Turkey.
  • The work of the charity has been widely publicized throughout the media.
  • All the good things this Labour Government has done pass by ignored, unheralded, unpublicised by either the press or the government itself.
  • In full view of the finish I had a very well publicised capsize.
  • It's a very nice and underpublicised story of a labour of love (or interesting obsession) that would be better known if it had been set in Los Angeles or Miami rather than rural Italy. This goodly frame, the earth
  • The last publicized stigmatic was Padre Pio, a Capuchin monk in Italy who gained world recognition as a faith healer and confessor. TOUCH
  • The Haluk — and our goddamn government — don't want to publicize the fact that human genes were used illegally to wipe out allomorphism. Sagittarius Whorl
  • That Moore is a chronic liar and twister of the truth obviously needs to be publicized as much as possible.
  • He went on to breed cattle and horses, and his schemes were widely publicized in English journals.
  • They may be asked to clean up after customers and publicise the anti-litter message on posters.
  • You might be familiar with the well-publicized challenges to classics like The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The Catcher in the Rye, or the more recent attempts to muzzle Harry Potter and (further) benight Philip Pullman's series His Dark Materials. John Lundberg: A Poem Highlights Banned Books Week
  • Journalists, across the political spectrum, publicized their position in the newspapers.
  • They spent their last evening in New York before the second trial at a party given by Cornelia Guest, the city’s most highly publicized postdebutante, whose mother, C.Z. Guest, the noted horsewoman, gardener, and socialite, was prepared to give testimony in von Bülow’s behalf at the trial and corroborate the allegations of the late Truman Capote and others that Sunny von Bülow was a drug addict and a drunk. Fatal Charm: The Social Web of Claus von Bulow
  • They've worked night and day to publicise their campaign.
  • The offeror must then publicise this intention in a mass circulation newspaper or by some other means approved by the supervisory authority.
  • Thus my suggestion or rather my plea is for one law firm to launch a massive class action lawsuit (publicize it and get people to sign up) that acts on the behalf of all Bell residential customers who have high-speed Internet through a 3rd party ISP. Call for class action against Bell Canada
  • They've worked night and day to publicise their campaign.
  • The pressure to publicise the practice will be roughly commensurate with the intensity of the competition.
  • Unlike his predecessor, he has publicised the results of all drug tests and banned for life those who have taken anabolic steroids. Times, Sunday Times
  • Each side exaggerated and widely publicized the acts of barbarism and cruelty committed by the opponent.
  • Several airlines are experimenting with selling tickets in cyberspace via silent auctions or last-minute fare deals publicized by e-mail.
  • But even that trio of conquests didn't satisfy his rampaging appetite. He also embarked on a much-publicised affair with an actress.
  • So rest assured that while we're eager to show our appreciation we would never publicize anyone's name without their explicit permission.
  • The program still relies on volunteers to help publicize and finance the building.
  • You might be familiar with the well-publicized challenges to classics like The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The Catcher in the Rye, or the more recent attempts to muzzle Harry Potter and (further) benight Philip Pullman\'s series His Dark Materials. John Lundberg: A Poem Highlights Banned Books Week
  • This budget is a pure charade with more hidden tax than the publicised ones.
  • However, Stalin introduced it into the USSR in the 1930s, as an unpublicized part of the industrial revolution he conducted there; and once the Pacific war had started the Japanese used slave labour to build the Burma - Thailand railway.
  • To enhance the publicity on internet, they publicized on Campus BBS.
  • “The highly publicized, well-financed opposition to the controversial Cape Wind project off Nantucket Sound ‘is an anomaly,’ Kempton said.” Offshore Wind: The Best Energy Investment America Could Make?
  • Produce - leaflets, send emails, create Facebook groupsand ask organizations tohelp publicize the meetings. OpEdNews - Diary: HOW TO BUILD A LOCAL VOTE STRIKE GROUP
  • To give special attention to ; display , publicize, or make prominent.
  • The highly publicized abortion debate overshadowed the rest of the platform that calls for a smorgasbord of constitutional amendments.
  • The prime minister flew to Saudi Arabia yesterday on an unpublicised mission to talk to the country's leaders.
  • ForestEthics ran a full-page ad in USA Today to publicize the issue. William S. Becker: Climate Action: Part 3 - Taking it to the Streets
  • Created by a member of the Seattle office of the National Council of Jewish Women's to publicize performances of Eve Ensler's Vagina Monologues, the Seattle Times refused to run the yonic ad unless it was altered, with the VP of advertising claiming, "The artwork was something we didn't feel was appropriate for our audience. Leslie Goldman: Vaginas Are The New Black
  • Her second space mission was widely publicised and plans made to celebrate on her return.
  • This surprise move was revealed in an unpublicised review by a senior Whitehall civil servant, Mike Baldwin, recently posted on the DETR's website.
  • Consequently, these private or selective incentives also served to "depoliticize" the base issue in Kyrgyz politics, as political parties, the Kyrgyz parliament, and the media neither publicized nor overtly criticized the terms of the basing agreement. The Duck of Minerva
  • Something I've not yet commented on since my part facultative-festive and part enforced-technological break is the welcome restoration of sense and good legal analysis to the field of religious discrimination by the Employment Appeal Tribunal, which has reversed the much-publicised but obviously wrong decision at first instance in this case. Archive 2009-01-01
  • They need not publicise such guidance, but it would give direction, and direction is what this government is lacking. Times, Sunday Times
  • The most recently publicized incident took place last March, when a group of young neo-fascists in Rome attempted to murder 10 Eastern European and African immigrants by setting fire to their makeshift huts under a railroad trellis.
  • The work of the charity has been widely publicized throughout the media.
  • The seminars are widely publicised beforehand, and print and broadcast journalists are invited to attend.
  • Recent well-publicised cases of the disease highlight the point that this epidemic will not go away on its own.
  • According the New York Times, US officials made these accusations in 'unpublicized' diplomatic protest to Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani and other top Pakistani officials in June. Dailyindia.com News Feed
  • The unpublicized Bush review outlined some of the policies that the Obama administration would later adopt, including treating Afghanistan as a regional problem that included Pakistan and building up the Afghan state at the provincial level, something that hitherto had been largely ignored, and it advocated an expanded counterinsurgency mission. The Longest War
  • Instead of cowing the population, this is only creating more instances of official abuse that are publicized on the Internet, leading to greater anger and defiance. Why China Is Unhappy
  • Whatever happens, if this becomes more widely publicised it will be used as a stick to beat vegans with.
  • If I tour New York it will be to publicize Lord of Darkness not to be photographed smiling at your elbow. MIDNIGHT IS A LONELY PLACE
  • Her recent speech was merely a restatement of her widely publicised views.
  • Salter told him of the decision to publicize the loss of the seal, to offer a reward. A BODY SURROUNDED BY WATER
  • They should publicise the names and addresses of these morons so we can all point and laugh.
  • But the "die out" not means the media will be disappear, it means count for little in the market, because it will still undertake the important publicize task.
  • These Congresscritters know perfectly well they have a big problem here, but they felt obliged nonetheless to make their highly publicized trips to Canossa. Rush Is Having Fun
  • Almost equally unpublicised was a meeting at the Council of Europe in Strasbourg this week.
  • It is endemic, multileveled, and interlinked and the publicized prosecutions and executions orchestrated from Beijing have done little to suppress it. Global impact of Chinese corruption
  • Despite his well-publicized death, Natali can still vote, the voter rolls say.
  • The politicians seeking to deny him a second term accuse him of "charity" economics and of trying to lure voters with handouts, such as much-publicised distribution of "surplus production" potatoes in different locations earlier this year. Mail & Guardian Online
  • I'm sure you've made a new friend in Mme Alberte -- especially now that you've publicized her son's stand. Mamie - French Word-A-Day
  • Attitudes seem to be changing as a result of recent highly publicized cases of sexual harassment.
  • The original invention of the chronoscope was by Sterbinski-you see, I know that much - and it was well publicized. The Complete Stories Vol 1
  • Documentaries essentially arise out of a desire to communicate and publicise issues that are of local, national or worldwide concern and are usually infused with the passion of the film-makers.
  • A ship spokesman would not give details of private events planned but said public sessions would be publicised soon.
  • In the future, the Chinese Government will further strengthen its efforts to publicize and implement relevant export control regulations with an aim to enforce them comprehensively and effectively.
  • Some privately-held waters, who do not publicise their returns, are said to have landed more than 100 fresh springers already, in the first two months, and that is with only two rods fishing daily.
  • In the summer of 1964, he publicized that she invented the miniskirt giving the short skirt a name Mini, after her favorite car, but hardly inventing it as, Mr Bates had previously shown the length, the first above the knee dresses shown in England. Vicky Tiel: The Mini Wars
  • The low mintage 1844 issue was hoarded by the late Frank Ross, who then publicized the rarity of the date, though the mintage is the fifth smallest of the series, not the smallest. Liberty Seated Dime, Stars, Drapery, 1840-1860 : Coin Guide
  • Robert Smithson and John Lloyd Stephens were both New Jersey-born residents of Manhattan, wherefrom each embarked on a well-publicized excursion to the Yucatan Peninsula.
  • The widely publicised fear is that this strain of avian flu might somehow mutate into one that could spread from human to human.
  • Salter told him of the decision to publicize the loss of the seal, to offer a reward. A BODY SURROUNDED BY WATER
  • A widely publicized slogan says that there are no trifling matters where the interests of the masses are concerned.
  • It is not uncommon for much-publicised programmes to end up as non-events in the State.
  • Literary prizes are hugely valuable to struggling authors, and often introduce readers to relatively unpublicised books. Times, Sunday Times
  • Publicize the experience of this co - operative wherever you go.
  • The event was well publicized all over town.
  • There was a well-publicised spat with sports writers whom he claimed were burdening him with too much attention for a tennis player ranked in the 40-somethings.
  • Five years later, trade magazines sang his praises; and five years after that, he became "the most discussed and publicized adman in a generation. The King of Madison Avenue
  • For days, the military has publicized what they call the imminent start of Operation Mushtarak, the Dari word for Together. Democratic Underground Latest Breaking News
  • There was a largely unpublicised dispensation, the deadline of which ended last Monday, whereby areas of crop failure could be regarded as set-aside, provided MAFF was notified.
  • A string of conservation campaigns publicized Tassie as Australia's ultimate natural escape - an Eden for "greenies."
  • Her recent speech was merely a restatement of her widely publicised views.
  • Colombia, ruled by military and social dictator General Gustavo Rojas Pinilla, played down the true events and Velasco’s vastly publicized story had a certain sugary taste. Archive 2006-07-01
  • I wish to publicise that I would be willing to billet some of the Tampa refugees in my own house until their fate is determined.
  • Sen. John McCain's wife Cindy appears in a new ad that harshly criticizes the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy, and government officials and religious leaders generally, over what she and others describe as complicity in the bullying that has led to a rash of highly-publicized suicides among gay youth. Cindy McCain Speaks Out Against DADT While John McCain Defends It (VIDEO)
  • Article 130 Lawyers and law firms may not preach down other lawyers or law firms and their services in the lawyer's advertisements they publicize.
  • However, not all ads for medical service are banned from inviting celebrities to publicize their products.
  • In 1785, he introduced a bleaching liquid called lye de Javelle and publicized his technique without patenting it. Covenant Zone
  • The work of the charity has been widely publicized throughout the media.
  • A less well publicised role of some public relations companies is to hire freelance journalists to cover events such as major conferences with news stories to be placed in medical publications.
  • The stipulation that the decedent was aware of the well - publicized health risks of cigarettes merely places him in the same position as the ordinary consumer or potential consumer of cigarettes. Mass. Supreme Judicial Court Bars Big Tobacco Defense: Can't Blame the Smoker
  • I hardly see any point in having critiques and comments if they are to be publicized outside the paper.
  • The last publicized stigmatic was Padre Pio, a Capuchin monk in Italy who gained world recognition as a faith healer and confessor. TOUCH
  • The highly publicized abortion debate overshadowed the rest of the platform that calls for a smorgasbord of constitutional amendments.
  • Publicize the match: take charge of the poster facture and handbill distribution. Considering the lasting time span of this match, principal should dispose the lasting publicizing work.
  • The fact that it was not deliberately publicised does not, I believe, signify an intention to cover it up.
  • An industry that is endorsed and publicised by endless smiling celebrities and generally an accepted part of modern life: cosmetic surgery. Times, Sunday Times
  • They detail a pattern of exploitation that has gone largely unpublicised and unpunished. Times, Sunday Times
  • Just changing staff rosters caused the airline to suffer some embarrassing and well-publicised delays over the summer.
  • That episode and error were widely publicised at the time and have dominated some obituaries.
  • It gave some backing to Wilson's much-publicized but largely ineffective policy of economic sanctions against Rhodesia.
  • The stalwart is the latest to be caught up in this book controversies after swimmer Stephanie Rice had been done in byher saucyphotos atafancy dress ball being publicised of her Facebook the other profile Nikki caught in Facebook row
  • Hardly surprising, since men have been readier to publicise their pals. Times, Sunday Times
  • The anything-but-not-a-public-option medical “reform” was/is touted highly by insurance companies … with nary a word of publicised protest. 2010 February — Fusion Despatches
  • Legal sources said the prisoners cannot be forced to accept the writs, and that the highly publicised lawsuits cannot proceed without them.
  • I called you here, because I need you to help me publicize a new development. FURTHER TALES OF THE CITY
  • This paper also advocates managing carefully and perseveringly and energizing to publicize and educate to train the staff and workers' consciousness in saving energy conscientiously.
  • To date, the only publicised attempt at human ovarian autotransplantation after cryopreservation was unsuccessful because folliculogenesis returned only for a short time.
  • The pressure to publicise the practice will be roughly commensurate with the intensity of the competition.
  • Where once it was society's guilty secret, now there is a concerted effort to trawl for and publicise any hint of racism.
  • The report points out that many doctors are engaging in such practices despite a well-publicized crackdown on insurance fraud and abuse.
  • The punishment was widely publicised in the state press as a warning to other local leaders.
  • The draft City by-laws have been extensively publicised in the media to allow members of the public to comment.
  • The legendary shootout at the O.K. Corral is perhaps the best-known gun battle in the highly publicized and cinematized history of the Wild West.
  • I don't mind as I'm never that busy and it helps to publicise Helping Paw. RESCUING ROSE
  • It is sad so many of these things go virtually unadvertised and unpublicised. Times, Sunday Times
  • Talk of the underpublicised project has generated a lively debate on Schneier's The Register
  • Except in so far as they publicized opinion poll findings, television projections of party credibility did not dictate public perceptions.

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