Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Simple past tense and past participle of
publish .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- adjective formally made public
- adjective prepared and printed for distribution and sale
Etymologies
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Examples
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"This dedication may serve for almost any book that has, is, or shall be published:" -- "that _has been_, or _will be published_."
English Grammar in Familiar Lectures Samuel Kirkham
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Edition (_published_ by Mr. Brimley Johnson, but differing considerably from the editions which he has _edited_); and the Winchester Edition, published by Mr. Grant Richards.
Jane Austen, Her Life and Letters A Family Record Richard Arthur Austen-Leigh
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The abore are the only works yet published of a series of the GREEK POETS intended to be printed uniformly with them; and a Series of the LATIN POETS of the same sise is in the press: ot which is jrnt published*
Cicero's Five Books De Finibus: Or, Concerning the Last Object of Desire and Aversion 1812
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The earliest scientific name that might apply to the southern Dolly Varden of North America is “Salmo lordi,” a name published in 1866 for a char from the Skagit River of Washington and British Columbia.
Trout and Salmon of North America Robert J. Behnke 2002
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The oldest scientific name that might apply to southern Dolly Varden as a species or a subspecies is “Salmo curilus,” a name published in 1811 for char of the Kuril Islands.
Trout and Salmon of North America Robert J. Behnke 2002
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The earliest scientific name that might apply to the southern Dolly Varden of North America is “Salmo lordi,” a name published in 1866 for a char from the Skagit River of Washington and British Columbia.
Trout and Salmon of North America Robert J. Behnke 2002
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The oldest scientific name that might apply to southern Dolly Varden as a species or a subspecies is “Salmo curilus,” a name published in 1811 for char of the Kuril Islands.
Trout and Salmon of North America Robert J. Behnke 2002
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The oldest scientific name that might apply to southern Dolly Varden as a species or a subspecies is “Salmo curilus,” a name published in 1811 for char of the Kuril Islands.
Trout and Salmon of North America Robert J. Behnke 2002
-
The earliest scientific name that might apply to the southern Dolly Varden of North America is “Salmo lordi,” a name published in 1866 for a char from the Skagit River of Washington and British Columbia.
Trout and Salmon of North America Robert J. Behnke 2002
-
The oldest scientific name that might apply to southern Dolly Varden as a species or a subspecies is “Salmo curilus,” a name published in 1811 for char of the Kuril Islands.
Trout and Salmon of North America Robert J. Behnke 2002
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