publicise

IPA/ˈpʌb.lɪ.saɪz/
IPA/ˈpʌb.lə.saɪz/

publicise — 動詞

  • publicisepresent simple I / you / we / they
  • publicises3rd person singular
  • publicising-ing form
  • publicisedpast simple

1. to give information about something to the public so that many people know about

1.動詞及物B2
釋義

宣傳;公佈

公開傳播資訊使大眾得知

to give information about something to the public so that many people know about it — for example, a charity advertising its fundraising walk, a government sharing new safety rules, or a school letting families know about a concert.

例句

The Watanabe family publicised their son's music concert with flyers at the local market.

渡邊一家人在當地市場張貼傳單,宣傳兒子的音樂會。

publicise + noun phrase (event)

Dr. Okafor publicised the free eye clinic by hanging posters at community centres.

Okafor 醫生在全城社區中心張貼海報,宣傳免費眼科診所的服務。

同義詞
  • advertise

    more specific — focuses on paid promotion of a product or service rather than general information sharing

  • promote

    broader — can include making something popular through events or word of mouth, not just giving information

  • broadcast

    focuses on delivering a message to a wide audience, often through radio, TV, or online media

  • announce

    more formal — often used for official statements or decisions rather than sustained publicity campaigns

反義詞
  • conceal

    to keep something hidden from the public on purpose

  • suppress

    to prevent information from becoming known, often through authority or force

文法句型

be publicised + adverb (well/widely/highly)

publicise + noun phrase

用法筆記

Common in the passive voice (e.g. 'was well publicised'). Note the UK/US spelling difference: British English uses publicise, while American English uses publicize.

常見錯誤

The charity publicised about the fundraising event.
The charity publicised the fundraising event.
💡publicise is a transitive verb and takes a direct object without a preposition.
She publicised to the public the results.
She publicised the results to the public.
💡the direct object should come immediately after the verb; the audience follows with 'to'.