What part of speech is publicity?

Publicity can be categorized as a noun.

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Parts of speech

Inflections

Noun

What does publicity mean?

Definitions

Noun

publicity - the quality of being open to public view; "the publicity of the court room"
publicity - a message issued in behalf of some product or cause or idea or person or institution; "the packaging of new ideas"

Examples of publicity

#   Sentence  
1. noun The publicity of the court room.
2. noun That's just a cheap publicity stunt.
3. noun The news brought her a lot of publicity.
4. noun You're going to get much publicity with this book.
5. noun This event was good publicity for the company.
6. noun Only the assumption that the reader - I better say: the prospective reader, because for the moment there is not the slightest prospect, that my writing could see the lights of publicity, - unless it miraculously left our endangered fortress Europe and brought a hint of the secrets of our loneliness to those outside; - I beg to be allowed to begin anew: only because I anticipate the wish to be told casually about the who and what of the writer, I send some few notes on my own individuum out before these openings, - of course not without the awareness that exactly by doing so I might provoke doubts in the reader, that he is in the right hands, which is to say: if I, from all my being, am the right man for a task to which maybe the heart pulls me more than any qualifying relation in character.
7. noun Tom did it as a publicity stunt.
8. noun We don't want any bad publicity.
9. noun I don’t regret it. To tell you the truth, this has given me some publicity.
10. noun It was a publicity stunt.
11. noun This is the biggest publicity stunt I've ever seen.
12. noun I heard Tom hates publicity.
13. noun You don't have to worry about publicity.
14. noun January 15 is Interlingua Day, with activities and publicity to spread Interlingua across the whole world.
15. noun We did that as a publicity stunt.
Sentence  
noun
The publicity of the court room.
That's just a cheap publicity stunt.
The news brought her a lot of publicity.
You're going to get much publicity with this book.
This event was good publicity for the company.
Only the assumption that the reader - I better say: the prospective reader, because for the moment there is not the slightest prospect, that my writing could see the lights of publicity, - unless it miraculously left our endangered fortress Europe and brought a hint of the secrets of our loneliness to those outside; - I beg to be allowed to begin anew: only because I anticipate the wish to be told casually about the who and what of the writer, I send some few notes on my own individuum out before these openings, - of course not without the awareness that exactly by doing so I might provoke doubts in the reader, that he is in the right hands, which is to say: if I, from all my being, am the right man for a task to which maybe the heart pulls me more than any qualifying relation in character.
Tom did it as a publicity stunt.
We don't want any bad publicity.
I don’t regret it. To tell you the truth, this has given me some publicity.
It was a publicity stunt.
This is the biggest publicity stunt I've ever seen.
I heard Tom hates publicity.
You don't have to worry about publicity.
January 15 is Interlingua Day, with activities and publicity to spread Interlingua across the whole world.
We did that as a publicity stunt.

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