Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä

Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot

Synonyymit

Ääntäminen

  • Ääntäminen:
    • IPA: /ˈpʌb.lɪk/
  • ÄäntäminenUS:
    • IPA: [ˈpʌb.lɪk]
Käännös
Adjektiivit
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Adverbit
9.
Substantiivit
10.
11.

Määritelmät

Adjektiivi

  1. Able to be known or seen by everyone; happening without concealment; open to general view.
  2. Open to all members of a community, as opposed to only a segment of it; especially, provided by national or local authorities and supported by money from taxes.
  3. (business) Of a company: having shares of stock traded publicly, for example, through a stock market.
  4. Pertaining to the people as a whole, as opposed to a group of people; concerning the whole community or country.
  5. Officially representing the community; carried out or funded by the government or state on behalf of the community, rather than by a private organization.
  6. Pertaining to a person in the capacity in which they deal with other people on a formal or official basis, as opposed to a personal or private capacity; official, professional.
  7. (not comparable, by extension, object-oriented programming) Of an object: accessible to the program in general, not only to a class or subclass.
  8. Pertaining to nations collectively, or to nations regarded as civilized; international, supernational.
  9. Now chiefly in public spirit and public-spirited: seeking to further the best interests or well-being of the community or nation.
  10. Now only in public figure: famous, prominent, well-known.
  11. (UK, education, chiefly historical) In some older universities in the United Kingdom: open or pertaining to the whole university, as opposed to a constituent college or an individual staff member or student.
  12. Of or pertaining to the human race as a whole; common, universal.
  13. Chiefly in make public: of a work: printed or otherwise published.

Substantiivi

  1. (non-native speakers' English, neologism) An internet publication.
  2. (countable, uncountable) Chiefly preceded by the: members of the community or the people in general, regardless of membership of any particular group.
  3. Preceded by a possessive determiner such as my, your, or their: a group of people who support a particular person, especially a performer, a writer, etc.; an audience, a following.
  4. (informal) Ellipsis of public house or public bar (“an inn, a pub: the more basic bar in a public house, as contrasted with the lounge bar or saloon bar which has more comfortable seats, personalized service, etc.”).
  5. (often public relations) Often preceded by the and a qualifying word: a particular demographic or group of people, or segment of the population, sharing some common characteristic.
  6. (sociology) A group of people sharing some common cultural, political, or social interest, but not necessarily having any interactions with each other.
  7. Chiefly preceded by the: a collective body of a politically organized nation or state; a body politic, a nation, a state; also, the interest or well-being of such a collective body; the common good.
  8. (US, university slang) At Harvard University: a penalty imposed on a student involving a grade reduction which is communicated to the student's parents or guardian.
  9. (uncountable) Chiefly in in public: the presence of spectators or people generally; the open.

Verbi

  1. (transitive, originally Scotland, archaic) To make (something) openly or widely known; to publicize, to publish.

Esimerkit

  • Earlier this month Godwin had to make a public apology to the family of Daniel Morgan after the collapse of a £30m inquiry into his murder in 1987.
  • Seeing the British establishment struggle with the financial sector is like watching an alcoholic […].  Until 2008 there was denial over what finance had become. When a series of bank failures made this impossible, there was widespread anger, leading to the public humiliation of symbolic figures.
  • A mere 3% of the more than 1,000 people interviewed said they actually knew what the conference was about. It seems safe to say public awareness of the Convention on Biological Awareness in Nagoya - and its goal of safeguarding wildlife - is close to non-existent.
  • In order to grant the rich these pleasures, the social contract is reconfigured. […]  The public realm is privatised, the regulations restraining the ultra-wealthy and the companies they control are abandoned, and Edwardian levels of inequality are almost fetishised.
  • From another point of view, it was a place without a soul. The well-to-do had hearts of stone; the rich were brutally bumptious; the Press, the Municipality, all the public men, were ridiculously, vaingloriously self-satisfied.
  • But culture's total budget is a tiny proportion of all public spending; it is one of the government's most visible success stories.
  • Some are left for dead on rubbish tips, in refuge bags or at public toilets.
  • Now we are liberal with our innermost secrets, spraying them into the public ether with a generosity our forebears could not have imagined. Where we once sent love letters in a sealed envelope, or stuck photographs of our children in a family album, now such private material is despatched to servers and clouds operated by people we don't know and will never meet.
  • Members of the public may not proceed beyond this point.
  • Bush and Blair stand condemned by their own publics and face imminent political extinction.
  • “Two or three months more went by ; the public were eagerly awaiting the arrival of this semi-exotic claimant to an English peerage, and sensations, surpassing those of the Tichbourne case, were looked forward to with palpitating interest. […]”
  • The public has a right to know.
  • The city needs more public facilities.

Taivutusmuodot

Monikkopublics
Komparatiivimore public
Superlatiivimost public