What's the difference between publish and republish?

Publish


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To make public; to make known to mankind, or to people in general; to divulge, as a private transaction; to promulgate or proclaim, as a law or an edict.
  • (v. t.) To make known by posting, or by reading in a church; as, to publish banns of marriage.
  • (v. t.) To send forth, as a book, newspaper, musical piece, or other printed work, either for sale or for general distribution; to print, and issue from the press.
  • (v. t.) To utter, or put into circulation; as, to publish counterfeit paper.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Since MIRD Committee has not published "S" values for Tl-200 and Tl-202, these have been calculated by a computer code and are reported.
  • (2) National policy on the longer-term future of the services will not be known until the government publishes a national music plan later this term.
  • (3) It is the oldest medical journal in South America and the second in antiquity published in Spanish, after the Gaceta de México.
  • (4) The analysis is based on the personal experience of the authors with 117 cases and the review of 223 cases published in the literature.
  • (5) Both condemn the treatment of Ibrahim, whose supposed offence appears to have shifted over time, from fabricating a defamatory story to entering a home without permission to misleading an interviewee for an article that was never published.
  • (6) The mean and median values in the nondiabetic group are higher than in previously published reports.
  • (7) It is my desperate hope that we close out of town.” In the book, God publishes his own 'It Getteth Better' video and clarifies his original writings on homosexuality: I remember dictating these lines to Moses; and afterward looking up to find him staring at me in wide-eyed astonishment, and saying, "Thou do knowest that when the Israelites read this, they're going to lose their fucking shit, right?"
  • (8) UN internal investigators delivered a report to the then secretary general, Kofi Annan, but it was not published.
  • (9) In documents due to be published by the bank, it will signal a need to shed costs from a business that employs 10,000 people as it scrambles to return to profit.
  • (10) The dangers caused by PM10s was highlighted in the Rogers review of local authority regulatory services, published in 2007, which said poor air quality contributed to between 12,000 and 24,000 premature deaths each year.
  • (11) Instead, the White House opted for a low-key approach, publishing a blogpost profiling Trinace Edwards, a brain-tumour victim who recently discovered she was eligible for Medicaid coverage.
  • (12) Nice (the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence) has also published new guidance on good patient experience that provides a strong framework on which to build good engagement practice.
  • (13) This article, a review of factors controlling vasopressin (AVP) release in pregnancy, extends our contribution to a symposium in this journal published in 1987 (vol X, pp 270-275).
  • (14) There are no published reports of its detection in neonates born to affected mothers.
  • (15) This is an edited extract from Across the Seas – Australia’s Response to Refugees: A History by Klaus Neumann, published by Black Inc. Books and on-sale now .
  • (16) The first part of this survey which dealt with equipment for the anterior segment was published in a previous issue of this journal.
  • (17) We detected no evidence for heterogeneity in this sample, but when we combined results with previously published lod scores, heterogeneity was statistically significant.
  • (18) There are many examples to support his assertion, yet for the most part, it is celebrities who dictate what images can be published and what stories should be told.
  • (19) Many reports of thyroid stimulating immunoglobulins (TSI) in relation to treatment of Graves' disease have been published and with variable results concerning prediction of permanent remission or relapse after therapy.
  • (20) The sequence of the coding region was derived from the published amino acid sequence of the protein (Tanaka, M., Haniu, M., Yasunobu, K.T., and Mayhew, S. G. (1974) J. Biol.

Republish


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To publish anew; specifically, to publish in one country (a work first published in another); also, to revive (a will) by re/xecution or codicil.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) So it will have been a wrench for Jez, and his embattled entourage, to have to “cave in”, as the Guardian’s report put it, and suspend the MP from the party after David Cameron (who really should leave the rough stuff to the rough end of the trade) had taunted him at PMQs for not acting sooner when the Guido Fawkes blog republished her ugly comments and the Mail on Sunday got out its trumpet.
  • (2) • This article originally appeared on Greenpeace's website and republished with permission.
  • (3) • This article originally appeared on Left Foot Forward and is republished here with permission
  • (4) In late 1999, Fisher's Genetical Theory was republished, and Bill supplied three paragraphs for the back dust-jacket.
  • (5) Buckles, who has more than 25 years' experience working in security, made the comments in an interview with the New Statesman magazine in April this year, which the firm has republished on its own website .
  • (6) But the paper delayed publication for a day, ran Miliband's riposte, but also republished the original offending article alongside an editorial refusing to apologise.
  • (7) And Guardian journalist Seumas Milne's 1994 book The Enemy Within , which exposed a post-strike media campaign to disgrace Scargill for allegedly using Libyan money donated to the strikers to repay what was in fact an already paid-off mortgage, has been republished, with further damning information.
  • (8) Khodorkovsky had written on Twitter that all respectable news outlets should republish the Charlie Hebdo cartoons in the wake of the Paris killings.
  • (9) It is republished here under a Creative Commons licence.
  • (10) • This article first appeared on the National Institute of Social and Economic Research website and is republished here with permission
  • (11) · This article was republished as part of a special edition marking 50 Years of the Guardian women's page .
  • (12) The Mail also republished Levy's article in Tuesday's paper along with an editorial defending it.
  • (13) Previously, you didn’t hear as much of this intonation that takes you back to the Soviet Union The researcher said the website would be especially effective if used as a “source-laundry asset” – putting out viral web stories that would then be republished by local news outlets and on social media.
  • (14) They were republished in other magazines, including Chi, and in the Irish edition of the Daily Star.
  • (15) The Guardian has republished the picture, pixelating the faces of everyone except the MP to ensure there is no threat to national security.
  • (16) In clause 6, the bill updates the law from the Duke of Brunswick's case in 1849 to the internet age by providing that a statement is not republished every time it is downloaded.
  • (17) A Shanghai newspaper learned of her groundbreaking research and "called for an end to the madness" in an editorial comment subsequently republished by the People's Daily – in what would have been an astonishing move for the staid official Communist party newspaper.
  • (18) Across Europe, dozens more newspapers, though none in Britain, prepared to republish some or all of the cartoons and scores of TV channels, including almost all the major French stations and the BBC, to broadcast images of them.
  • (19) Yet the events of that August night in 1963, soon to be commemorated in a blizzard of television programmes and republished memoirs, have great relevance for a man on the run and serve as an illustration of how life has changed over the last half-century for would-be escapologists.
  • (20) Now, if the declarations of Je Suis Charlie were to mean anything, papers like the Guardian ought to make amends and either republish the magazine’s offending cartoons or do its own depictions of the prophet – just to prove that it could.

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