Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- intransitive verb To make public announcement of, especially to proclaim the qualities or advantages of (a product or business) so as to increase sales. synonym: announce.
- intransitive verb To make known; call attention to.
- intransitive verb To warn or notify.
- intransitive verb To call the attention of the public to a product or business.
- intransitive verb To inquire or seek in a public notice, as in a newspaper.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To take note of; notice; observe.
- To inform; give notice, advice, or intelligence to, whether of a past or present event, or of something future: as, I advertised him of my intention.
- To give information to the public concerning; make public intimation or announcement of, by publication in periodicals, by printed bills, etc., as of anything for sale, lost or found, a meeting, an entertainment, or the like.
- Synonyms To apprise, inform.
- To make known, announce, proclaim, promulgate, publish.
- To take note; take heed; consider.
- To make public announcement of anything of which it is desired to inform the public; announce one's wishes or intentions by advertisement: as, to
advertise for something that is wanted.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- transitive verb Archaic To give notice to; to inform or apprise; to notify; to make known; hence, to warn; -- often followed by
of before the subject of information. - transitive verb To give public notice of; to announce publicly, esp. by a printed notice.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- verb call attention to
- verb make publicity for; try to sell (a product)
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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"Well, you could say I no longer feel the need to advertise the fact," I recall her saying, in so many words which, by the way, was the first use of the word "advertise" in this sense, which made an impression on me and has stayed with me still.
Here's a five (5) question "POP QUIZ" about ME! Christopher Snyder 2011
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The only way you are allowed to advertise is either on or in your product, or during an in-store demonstration.
Short Story Break: Heinlein & Tiptree « A Working Title 2009
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As there are sites on the web that buy their appurtenances anatomy suppliers at broad again advertise it to humans at bedrock
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The only product they advertise is fear, Look what the non-citizen muslim President is doing now!
CNN Poll: Dems becoming less popular but no gains for GOP 2009
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April 15th, 2010 at 9: 58 am nfl jerseys china says: blazonsites on searching. the web that buy their appurtenances anatomy suppliers at broad again advertise it to humans at bedrock basal prices.
Think Progress » Uninformed Limbaugh Wonders ‘Where Was The Union’ At Non-Union Mine Disaster 2010
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What the NFL does not advertise is that some of its non-benevolent behemoths spend their spare time engaged in mayhem, armed and unarmed.
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Vitamins and water might seem like a good idea but what they don't advertise is that this water contains nearly as much calories and sugar as a can of soda.
America's Most Unhealthy Drinks Exposed - The Consumerist 2008
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The clinker is that the chain decides which Canadian authors they will display and advertise from a list of authors that the six publishers submit.
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To me the standard should be simple, the price you advertise is the price you charge.
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To me the standard should be simple, the price you advertise is the price you charge.
vanishedone commented on the word advertise
Early to bed,
Early to rise,
Work like hell,
And advertise.
(Attributed to Ted Turner.)
August 12, 2008
qroqqa commented on the word advertise
'I must advertise you, my dear, that my father is rather irritable.'
—Robert Bage, 1796, Hermsprong
This is OED sense 4. d., transitive with subordinate clause; not marked by them as obsolete, and they have an example from 1850, but as this word begins Ad- it probably hasn't been revised since 1889.
Hermsprong, by the way, is a delight: a satirical, didactic novel echoing Voltaire and prefiguring Jane Austen and Thomas Love Peacock. And I'd never heard of the author before!
Here's another example ibidem of a similar construction with recipient object:
In passing out they were met by Mr. Hermsprong, accompanied by the man-servant of the family, a man of a respectable appearance, who, on seeing the arrest of his master, had run of his own accord to a neighbouring village, to advertise a friend of Mr. Wigley's of this unhappy business.
March 20, 2009
vendingmachine commented on the word advertise
In a rare show of solidarity, both British English and American English spell advertise with an s in all forms. To advertise something is to do something to get people's attention on that object, event, or person.
http://grammarist.com/spelling/advertise-vs-advertize/
July 6, 2015
ruzuzu commented on the word advertise
It would be fun to have a list about advertising (ad, advert, advertise...), but I wonder whether it'd get all spammy. Do we have one already?
July 6, 2015