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单词 gazette
释义

Definition of gazette in English:

gazette

noun ɡəˈzɛtɡəˈzɛt
  • 1usually in names A journal or newspaper.

    the Westmorland Gazette
    Example sentencesExamples
    • During the eighteenth century there emerged lodges and coffee houses, newspapers and gazettes, academies and salons; there came spheres of activity governed by the public will and by public opinion.
    • When the commission receives the application, it places a notice in the government gazette and in a newspaper circulated in the respective area.
    • The government announced the election date in a special edition of the legal gazette.
    • These include a once-off notice in local newspapers, a notice in the government gazette and a visible on-site notice that contains contact details for objections or public comment.
    • Her letter announced that the official gazette notification would be published the next day.
    • The proposed law, of eight clauses and six sub-clauses, was published in the official gazette this week.
    • Neither he nor his father can be impressed by the fact that the paper's front page has latterly become a low-rent gazette chronicling the marital travails of minor celebrities.
    • The closure becomes effective only after the public has been notified about its legality through the government gazette or through local newspaper adverts.
    • By the last quarter of the eighteenth century nearly every capital in the north and centre, and also Rome and Naples, had experienced a journal or gazette of some kind, at least temporarily.
    • See this previous gazette article for more info.
    • Anyway, thanks for the laughs, and I look forward to reading the next journal and next gazette.
    • It was submitted that examination of this translation of the official gazette supplemented the views which he advanced.
    • A special police team was sent to the government press to ensure that the official gazette notification removing the ministers was issued.
    • However, these changes would only come into effect after the Bill is passed and an announcement made in the official gazette.
    • Taiwan saw the publication of its first official gazette in 1896 during the Japanese colonial era.
    • Thanks for the journal and gazette, and a space to rant.
    • The state government issued an official gazette notification to this effect late yesterday evening.
    • The nurse didn't even raise an eyebrow, continuing to read from her silly ladies' romance gazette.
    • The official gazette notification that parliament was dissolved was finally released at midnight.
    • It will launch its own fortnightly regional property gazette on May 11.
    Synonyms
    newspaper, paper, tabloid, broadsheet, journal, periodical, weekly, organ, news-sheet, newsletter, bulletin
    1. 1.1British An official publication containing lists of government appointments and promotions and other public notices.
      an announcement in Tuesday's London Gazette will make clear that he is being stripped of the honour
      Synonyms
      newspaper, paper, tabloid, broadsheet, journal, periodical, weekly, organ, news-sheet, newsletter, bulletin
    2. 1.2historical A news-sheet.
verb ɡəˈzɛtɡəˈzɛt
[with object]British
  • 1Announce or publish (something) in an official gazette.

    we will need to gazette the bill if a decision cannot be reached imminently
    a gazetted holiday
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He earned the respect and friendship of one of the assisting naval officers, a certain Horatio Nelson (who later testified at his trial), and his name was gazetted in the official published reports.
    • The real sting in the new Bill when it was finally gazetted was the attack on the organisations concerned with human rights and governance.
    • Prior to this act being gazetted, advocates could appear on behalf of clients, in any court in Namibia, whereas attorneys could only appear in regional and magistrate courts.
    • A half-day public holiday was gazetted in 1916, and church services and recruiting meetings were proposed.
    • I, on the other hand, went and stood in the Card Creek ecological area and saw why that area was gazetted as conservation land in 1983, under a National Government, and I saw why it deserves the conservation status it has now.
    • The Card Creek ecological area was gazetted and extended - both times under National Governments - for very valid reasons, because it is an area of high ecological value.
    • I do not have the details of all 2,700 schools in my head, but, from memory, I gazetted the closure of that school just before Christmas.
    • It is also interesting to note that in 1983, when it was originally gazetted as an ecological area, it was noted as one of the best examples in the Greymouth ecological district of forest on a wide valley floor.
    • The Minister now, for example, gets a chance to gazette safety courses without having to put them in the Gazette.
    • Nowadays any eclipse is gazetted well in advance, so that amateur and professional observers alike are well prepared, but that was not the case in Halley's era.
    • The ceremony was never gazetted and only came to light after details were leaked in December 2003.
    • Some may say that it is not part of this bill as it has already been gazetted to enter the quota management system, and the Minister has already allocated the total allowable catch and the total allowable commercial catch for it.
    • To give some credit to Dr Cullen, he did finally gazette those changes, which have at least required farmland to be publicly advertised for sale in New Zealand before it is flogged off overseas - never mind how small the advertisement is.
    • He also announced that he gazetted a set of norms and standards last week for educators, which he described as a ‘developmental’ rather than a policing exercise.
    • The day was not gazetted as a day-long public holiday, but as a little boy in Melbourne in the 1920s I can remember that, for the two minutes silence at eleven o'clock, a total hush covered the entire metropolis.
    • This is the same Minister who sacks boards of trustees without gazetting it.
    • ‘The current status is that there is no clear distinction between a hotel and a lodge and how these establishments are gazetted,’ he said.
    • The park was officially gazetted and is the only national park in Indonesia to have gone through this process.
    • Those who do not succeed, could as well compete for other gazetted posts.
    • ‘The minister agreed not to gazette the restructuring bill until the talks with unions are over,’ he said.
    1. 1.1with object and adverbial Publish the appointment of (someone) to a military or other official post.
      he was gazetted to the Somerset Light Infantry
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He spent almost his entire life soldiering, being gazetted ensign in the 12th Foot at 13 years of age.
      • If the Bulletin is correct, he was gazetted lieutenant in 1980.
      • So she was gazetted as a full-time employee with superannuation benefits and so on.
      • In 1961 I was gazetted I think, and I've either been President or Secretary, Treasurer, for probably 40 years or better.

Origin

Early 17th century: via French from Italian gazzetta, originally Venetian gazeta de la novità 'a halfpennyworth of news' (because the news-sheet sold for a gazeta, a Venetian coin of small value).

  • The word gazette came via French from Italian gazzetta, a shortening of the Venetian dialect gazeta de la novità ‘a halfpennyworth of news’—the news-sheet sold for a gazeta, a Venetian coin of very little value. The verb phrase to be gazetted (late 17th century) meant ‘be the subject of an announcement in a gazette’, and ‘be named in a gazette as being appointed to a military command’. Gazetteer is also early 17th century when it meant ‘journalist’: The current use of the word for a geographical index comes from a late 17th-century gazetteer called The Gazetteer's: or, Newsman's Interpreter: Being a Geographical Index.

Rhymes

abet, aiguillette, anisette, Annette, Antoinette, arête, Arlette, ate, baguette, banquette, barbette, barrette, basinet, bassinet, beget, Bernadette, beset, bet, Bette, blanquette, Brett, briquette, brochette, brunette (US brunet), Burnett, cadet, caravanette, cassette, castanet, charette, cigarette (US cigaret), clarinet, Claudette, Colette, coquette, corvette, couchette, courgette, croquette, curette, curvet, Debrett, debt, dinette, diskette, duet, epaulette (US epaulet), flageolet, flannelette, forget, fret, galette, Georgette, get, godet, grisette, heavyset, Jeanette, jet, kitchenette, La Fayette, landaulet, launderette, layette, lazaret, leatherette, let, Lett, lorgnette, luncheonette, lunette, Lynette, maisonette, majorette, maquette, Marie-Antoinette, marionette, Marquette, marquisette, martinet, met, minaret, minuet, moquette, motet, musette, Nanette, net, noisette, nonet, novelette, nymphet, octet, Odette, on-set, oubliette, Paulette, pet, Phuket, picquet, pillaret, pincette, pipette, piquet, pirouette, planchette, pochette, quartet, quickset, quintet, regret, ret, Rhett, roomette, rosette, roulette, satinette, septet, serviette, sestet, set, sett, sextet, silhouette, soubrette, spinet, spinneret, statuette, stet, stockinet, sublet, suffragette, Suzette, sweat, thickset, threat, Tibet, toilette, tret, underlet, upset, usherette, vedette, vet, vignette, vinaigrette, wagonette, wet, whet, winceyette, yet, Yvette
 
 

Definition of gazette in US English:

gazette

nounɡəˈzetɡəˈzɛt
  • 1usually in names A journal or newspaper.

    the Montreal Gazette
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Thanks for the journal and gazette, and a space to rant.
    • Anyway, thanks for the laughs, and I look forward to reading the next journal and next gazette.
    • A special police team was sent to the government press to ensure that the official gazette notification removing the ministers was issued.
    • See this previous gazette article for more info.
    • The official gazette notification that parliament was dissolved was finally released at midnight.
    • Taiwan saw the publication of its first official gazette in 1896 during the Japanese colonial era.
    • During the eighteenth century there emerged lodges and coffee houses, newspapers and gazettes, academies and salons; there came spheres of activity governed by the public will and by public opinion.
    • The nurse didn't even raise an eyebrow, continuing to read from her silly ladies' romance gazette.
    • These include a once-off notice in local newspapers, a notice in the government gazette and a visible on-site notice that contains contact details for objections or public comment.
    • The closure becomes effective only after the public has been notified about its legality through the government gazette or through local newspaper adverts.
    • Neither he nor his father can be impressed by the fact that the paper's front page has latterly become a low-rent gazette chronicling the marital travails of minor celebrities.
    • The government announced the election date in a special edition of the legal gazette.
    • Her letter announced that the official gazette notification would be published the next day.
    • The state government issued an official gazette notification to this effect late yesterday evening.
    • By the last quarter of the eighteenth century nearly every capital in the north and centre, and also Rome and Naples, had experienced a journal or gazette of some kind, at least temporarily.
    • It will launch its own fortnightly regional property gazette on May 11.
    • When the commission receives the application, it places a notice in the government gazette and in a newspaper circulated in the respective area.
    • The proposed law, of eight clauses and six sub-clauses, was published in the official gazette this week.
    • It was submitted that examination of this translation of the official gazette supplemented the views which he advanced.
    • However, these changes would only come into effect after the Bill is passed and an announcement made in the official gazette.
    Synonyms
    newspaper, paper, tabloid, broadsheet, journal, periodical, weekly, organ, news-sheet, newsletter, bulletin
    1. 1.1British An official publication containing lists of government appointments and promotions and other public notices.
      Synonyms
      newspaper, paper, tabloid, broadsheet, journal, periodical, weekly, organ, news-sheet, newsletter, bulletin
    2. 1.2historical A news-sheet.
verbɡəˈzetɡəˈzɛt
[with object]British
  • Announce or publish in an official gazette.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He earned the respect and friendship of one of the assisting naval officers, a certain Horatio Nelson (who later testified at his trial), and his name was gazetted in the official published reports.
    • It is also interesting to note that in 1983, when it was originally gazetted as an ecological area, it was noted as one of the best examples in the Greymouth ecological district of forest on a wide valley floor.
    • ‘The current status is that there is no clear distinction between a hotel and a lodge and how these establishments are gazetted,’ he said.
    • The Card Creek ecological area was gazetted and extended - both times under National Governments - for very valid reasons, because it is an area of high ecological value.
    • Prior to this act being gazetted, advocates could appear on behalf of clients, in any court in Namibia, whereas attorneys could only appear in regional and magistrate courts.
    • I do not have the details of all 2,700 schools in my head, but, from memory, I gazetted the closure of that school just before Christmas.
    • Nowadays any eclipse is gazetted well in advance, so that amateur and professional observers alike are well prepared, but that was not the case in Halley's era.
    • A half-day public holiday was gazetted in 1916, and church services and recruiting meetings were proposed.
    • I, on the other hand, went and stood in the Card Creek ecological area and saw why that area was gazetted as conservation land in 1983, under a National Government, and I saw why it deserves the conservation status it has now.
    • Some may say that it is not part of this bill as it has already been gazetted to enter the quota management system, and the Minister has already allocated the total allowable catch and the total allowable commercial catch for it.
    • The park was officially gazetted and is the only national park in Indonesia to have gone through this process.
    • This is the same Minister who sacks boards of trustees without gazetting it.
    • To give some credit to Dr Cullen, he did finally gazette those changes, which have at least required farmland to be publicly advertised for sale in New Zealand before it is flogged off overseas - never mind how small the advertisement is.
    • The ceremony was never gazetted and only came to light after details were leaked in December 2003.
    • Those who do not succeed, could as well compete for other gazetted posts.
    • The day was not gazetted as a day-long public holiday, but as a little boy in Melbourne in the 1920s I can remember that, for the two minutes silence at eleven o'clock, a total hush covered the entire metropolis.
    • He also announced that he gazetted a set of norms and standards last week for educators, which he described as a ‘developmental’ rather than a policing exercise.
    • The real sting in the new Bill when it was finally gazetted was the attack on the organisations concerned with human rights and governance.
    • The Minister now, for example, gets a chance to gazette safety courses without having to put them in the Gazette.
    • ‘The minister agreed not to gazette the restructuring bill until the talks with unions are over,’ he said.

Origin

Early 17th century: via French from Italian gazzetta, originally Venetian gazeta de la novità ‘a halfpennyworth of news’ (because the news-sheet sold for a gazeta, a Venetian coin of small value).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/24 21:51:55