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1 publicity
publicity [pʌbˈlɪsɪtɪ]• I keep getting publicity about the society's meetings je reçois tout le temps des circulaires concernant les réunions de la société* * *[pʌb'lɪsətɪ] 1.1) ( media attention)to receive bad ou adverse publicity — faire l'objet de critiques dans les médias
2) ( advertising) publicité f3) [U] ( advertising material) ( brochures) brochures fpl publicitaires; ( posters) affiches fpl publicitaires; ( films) films mpl publicitaires2. -
2 publicity
A n1 ( media attention) to attract publicity attirer l'attention f des médias ; to shun publicity fuir les médias ; to take place in a blaze of publicity avoir lieu sous les feux des médias ; to receive bad ou adverse publicity faire l'objet de critiques dans les médias ; there is no such thing as bad publicity toute publicité est bonne à prendre ;2 ( advertising) publicité f ; to be responsible for publicity être responsable de la publicité ; to give sth great publicity, to be great publicity for sth faire beaucoup de publicité pour qch ; to be bad publicity for être une mauvaise publicité pour ; advance publicity promotion f (for pour) ;3 ( advertising material) ( brochures) brochures fpl publicitaires ; ( posters) affiches fpl publicitaires ; ( films) films mpl publicitaires ; I've seen some of their publicity j'ai vu quelques-unes de leurs brochures or affiches. -
3 adverse
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4 adverse
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5 harm
harm [hɑ:m]1 noun(UNCOUNT) (physical) mal m; (psychological) tort m, mal m;∎ to do sb harm faire du mal à qn;∎ I hope Ed won't come to (any) harm j'espère qu'il n'arrivera rien à Ed;∎ a bath wouldn't do him any harm un bain ne lui ferait pas de mal;∎ she has done you no harm elle ne vous a fait aucun mal;∎ they didn't mean any harm ils ne voulaient pas (faire) de mal;∎ Ted means no harm Ted n'est pas méchant;∎ I know you didn't mean any harm when you said it je sais que tu ne l'as pas dit méchamment;∎ the incident did a great deal of harm to his reputation cet incident a beaucoup nui à sa réputation;∎ no harm done il n'y a pas de mal;∎ there's no harm in trying il n'y a pas de mal à essayer, on ne perd rien à essayer;∎ I see no harm in their going je ne vois pas d'inconvénient à ce qu'ils y aillent;∎ what harm is there in it? qu'est-ce qu'il y a de mal (à cela)?;∎ no harm will come of it ça n'est pas grave;∎ too much adverse publicity will do their cause a great deal of harm trop de mauvaise publicité nuira énormément à leur cause;∎ to do more harm than good faire plus de mal que de bien;∎ Ray wouldn't harm a hair on her head Ray ne lui ferait aucun mal;∎ he wasn't harmed by the experience ça ne lui a pas fait de mal
См. также в других словарях:
publicity — pub|lic|i|ty W3S2 [pʌˈblısıti] n [U] 1.) the attention that someone or something gets from newspapers, television etc ▪ Standards in education have received much publicity over the last few years. bad/good/unwelcome etc publicity ▪ It s important … Dictionary of contemporary English
publicity — /pV blIsifiti/ noun (U) 1 the attention that someone or something gets from newspapers, television etc: The case has received massive publicity. | bad/adverse publicity (=publicity that makes you look bad) | publicity stunt (=something that is… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
adverse — 01. [Adverse] weather conditions are making it difficult for rescuers to reach a sinking ship off the coast of British Columbia. 02. Mexico s economy has been [adversely] affected by the recession in the U.S. 03. The governor has received a great … Grammatical examples in English
adverse — ad|verse [ˈædvə:s US ə:rs] adj [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: Early French advers, from Latin adversus, past participle of advertere; ADVERT] 1.) not good or favourable ▪ They fear it could have an adverse effect on global financial markets. ▪ Miller… … Dictionary of contemporary English
adverse — adjective 1 not favourable: an adverse report | adverse publicity 2 adverse conditions/effects etc conditions etc that make it difficult for something to happen or exist: We had to abandon the climb because of adverse weather conditions.… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
publicity — pub‧lic‧i‧ty [pʌˈblɪsti] noun [uncountable] 1. the attention that someone or something gets from newspapers, television etc: • The case has received massive publicity. • Sales of the drug are falling due to adverse (= negative ) publicity about… … Financial and business terms
adverse — UK US /ˈædvɜːs/ adjective [before noun] ► harmful or likely to cause problems: »A chain reaction of adverse events in the financial markets has put lenders under severe pressure. adverse effect/impact/change »Recent bad publicity has had an… … Financial and business terms
publicity — noun 1 media attention ADJECTIVE ▪ considerable, enormous, extensive, greater, wide, widespread ▪ The papers have begun to give greater publicity to the campaign against GM food. ▪ … Collocations dictionary
publicity*/ — [pʌbˈlɪsəti] noun [U] attention in newspapers and on television a publicity campaign (= an attempt to get publicity)[/ex] Her behaviour during the filming attracted a lot of publicity.[/ex] • Words often used with publicity Adjectives often used… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
publicity */*/ — UK [pʌbˈlɪsətɪ] / US noun [uncountable] 1) attention in magazines, newspapers, or television Her behaviour during the filming attracted a lot of free publicity. a publicity campaign (= an attempt to get publicity) • Collocations: Adjectives… … English dictionary
adverse — adj. Adverse is used with these nouns: ↑circumstance, ↑comment, ↑condition, ↑consequence, ↑criticism, ↑effect, ↑impact, ↑implication, ↑influence, ↑outcome, ↑publicity, ↑ … Collocations dictionary