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1 adverse publicity
Англо-русский словарь промышленной и научной лексики > adverse publicity
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2 contre-publicité
kɔ̃tʀəpyblisitenom féminin adverse publicity* * *contre-publicité nf adverse publicity.[kɔ̃trəpyblisite] ( pluriel contre-publicités) nom féminin[qui concurrence] knocking copy[qui manque son objectif] anti-advertisement -
3 антиреклама
Advertising: adverse publicity (в средствах массовой информации) -
4 неблагоприятное освещение
1) Diplomatic term: bad coverage (в печати и т.п.)2) Advertising: adverse publicityУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > неблагоприятное освещение
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5 негативная огласка
General subject: Adverse publicityУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > негативная огласка
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6 amortir
v. trans. Amortir le coup:a To hush things up, to keep matters quiet, to avoid unnecessary publicity.b To 'smooth things over', to make as little fuss as possible and minimize the adverse effects of an event.
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