republish
English
editEtymology
editPronunciation
editVerb
editrepublish (third-person singular simple present republishes, present participle republishing, simple past and past participle republished)
- (transitive) To publish once again; to print and distribute copies of a work that has previously been printed and distributed.
- 2012, Pariah S. Burke, ePublishing with InDesign CS6, page 502:
- To remove a custom thumbnail and use the Aquafadas DPS automatically generated thumbnail of the article, click the Delete button and republish or repreview the article or project.
- 2020 January 24, Donnie O'Sullivan, “Exclusive: This site pays Americans to write ‘news’ articles. Signs indicate it originates in Iran”, in CNN[2]:
- While American Herald Tribune pays some contributors like King for original content, it also republishes articles from elsewhere and then lists the people who wrote those articles as contributors to its site.
- 2021 April 27, Daniel Dale, “New York Post temporarily deletes, then edits false story that claimed Harris’ book was given out in migrant ‘welcome kits’”, in CNN[3]:
- The New York Post also temporarily took down and then revised and republished an article about the Fox reporter’s exchange with White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki on Monday.
- 2021 December 9, Rob Kuznia, Curt Devine and Yahya Abou-Ghazala, “Epik is a refuge for the deplatformed far right. Here’s why its CEO insists on doing it”, in CNN[4]:
- And in both cases, a man named Rob Monster – an outspoken born-again Christian and the CEO of a tech company called Epik – made pointed restorations, republishing much of the New Zealand content and putting Gab back online. All in the name, he said, of free speech.
Translations
editto publish once again; to print and distribute copies of a work that has previously been printed and distributed
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