Pronunciation of the English word publicity.
# | Sentence | |
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1. | That's just a cheap publicity stunt. | |
2. | The news brought her a lot of publicity. | |
3. | You're going to get much publicity with this book. | |
4. | This event was good publicity for the company. | |
5. | 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. | |
6. | Tom did it as a publicity stunt. | |
7. | We don't want any bad publicity. | |
8. | I don’t regret it. To tell you the truth, this has given me some publicity. | |
9. | It was a publicity stunt. | |
10. | This is the biggest publicity stunt I've ever seen. |