publicly advertise
1advertise — ad‧ver‧tise [ˈædvətaɪz ǁ ər ] verb [intransitive, transitive] 1. MARKETING to tell people publicly about a product or service in order to persuade them to buy it: • Beer and wine are both advertised on TV. • They were among the most heavily… …
2advertise — [ad′vər tīz΄] vt. advertised, advertising [ME advertisen < OFr a(d)vertiss , extended stem of advertir, to warn, call attention to < L advertere, ADVERT1] 1. to tell about or praise (a product, service, etc.) publicly, as through newspapers …
3Advertise — Ad ver*tise (?; 277), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Advertised}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Advertising}.] [F. avertir, formerly also spelt advertir, to warn, give notice to, L. advertere to turn to. The ending was probably influenced by the noun advertisement. See …
4advertise — I verb advise, announce, apprise, attract, broadcast, circularize, circulate, communicate, describe, disseminate, divulge, exhibit, expose, feature, flourish, focus the attention, headline, herald, inform, notice, notify, placard, post, proclaim …
5advertise — (Brit.) ad·ver·tise || ædvÉ™taɪz v. publicise, promote, draw attention to (generally in order to sell goods or services); publicly announce; give notice, inform; (in Poker card game) bluff in order to make the bluff apparent (also advertize) …
6advertise — advertisable /ad veuhr tuy zeuh beuhl, ad veuhr tuy /, adj. advertiser, n. /ad veuhr tuyz , ad veuhr tuyz /, v., advertised, advertising. v.t. 1. to announce or praise (a product, service, etc.) in some public medium of communication in order to… …
7advertise — verb ( tised; tising) Etymology: Middle English, to pay heed to, observe, notify, from Anglo French advertiss , stem of advertir Date: 15th century transitive verb 1. to make something known to ; notify …
8advertise — verb /ˈæd.vɚ.taɪz/ a) To give public notice of; to announce publicly; as to advertise goods for sale, a lost article, the sailing day of a vessel, a political meeting. It pays to advertise. b) To provide information about in communications media …
9advertise — [15] When it was originally borrowed into English, from French, advertise meant ‘notice’. It comes ultimately from the Latin verb advertere ‘turn towards’ (whose past participle adversus ‘hostile’ is the source of English adverse [14] and… …
10advertise — verb 1 (I, T) to tell people publicly about a product or service in order to persuade them to buy it: Have you tried that new shampoo they ve been advertising on TV? 2 (I, T) to make an announcement, for example in a newspaper or on a poster,… …