gazette
gazette 英 [gəˈzet] 美 [ɡəˈzɛt]
n. (英)公报;报纸 vt. 在报上刊载
进行时:gazetting 过去式:gazetted 过去分词:gazetted 第三人称单数:gazettes 名词复数:gazettes
- A newspaper or journal can be called a gazette. In fact, many English-language newspapers from coast-to-coast include the name gazette in their title, from The Daily Hampshire Gazette in Massachusetts to the Mariposa Gazette in California.
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- n. (英)公报;报纸
- vt. 在报上刊载
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1. James put all the elements of the campaign—politics, press, and research—into a big open space in the old newsroom of the Arkansas gazette building.
詹姆斯把竞选班子的所有主要部门——政治策略、媒体、调查研究——都集中在《阿肯色州公报》大楼宽阔的旧编辑室里。
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2. According to the gazette, the new law will eliminate the need for approval from a state housing agency, meaning sales and exchanges will only need the seal of a notary.
根据政府的公报,新法令会让国家房屋管理机构的批准变得不再必要,意味着房产销售和交换只需要公证人盖章。
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3. Hence this paper, the Sydney gazette, was considered to be the Government organ, and, accordingly, its opinions of the Governors and their acts were greatly distrusted.
因此这份名为《悉尼公报》的报纸被认为是政府的喉舌,而它的有关总督及其法令的报道深受公众怀疑。
- gazette (n.) "newspaper," c. 1600, from French gazette (16c.), from Italian gazzetta, Venetian dialectal gazeta "newspaper," also the name of a small copper coin, literally "little magpie," from gazza; applied to the monthly newspaper (gazeta de la novità) published in Venice by the government, either from its price or its association with the bird (typical of false chatter), or both. First used in English 1665 for the paper issued at Oxford, whither the court had fled from the plague.
- gazette (v.) "to announce in the Gazette," 1670s; see gazette (n.). The three official journals were published in Britain from c. 1665, twice weekly, and contained lists of appointments, promotions, public notices, etc. Hence, to be gazetted was "to be named to a command, etc."
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