publicly [ˈpʌblɪklɪ] adverbiopúblicamente - publicly owned -> de titularidad pública
Copyright © 2006 Chambers Harrap Publishers Limited
publicly [pa-bli-kli]adverbioPúblicamente, a la vista de todos.
Velazquez® Spanish and English Dictionary. Copyright © 2007 by Velazquez® Press. All rights reserved.
publicly [ˈpʌblɪklɪ]
adverb
[+acknowledge, criticize, accuse] públicamente; en público; [+announce, state, humiliate] públicamente; [+funded] con fondos públicos land and buildings that are publicly owned tierras y edificios que son propiedad pública del Estado; (f) (m)or
Mr # Bush has publicly acknowledged that some American workers might lose their jobs throughout the campaign he certainly never publicly acknowledged that he thought he was going to lose the recent scandal in which Fujimori's wife publicly accused the president's brother of stealing clothing Her bitterness spilled out after her former lover and HIV carrier Roy Cornes publicly announced his remorse the merger was publicly announced last Friday deliberations of the general council have not been publicly announced, mainly because they have to be ratified His wife has publicly humiliated him with another man While he was in jail for those burglaries, she publicly humiliated him by suing him for non-support of the family they have granted licences to housebuilders to develop publicly owned sites for private sale the emergence of the employee pension funds as the controlling shareholders of publicly owned companies the problem lies with a city law requiring publicly funded projects to accept the lowest bidder the taxpayers will be more likely to support publicly funded art if the funding decisions are made a little closer to home George Mason University, a publicly funded institution of higher learning
this information should be made publicly available esta información se debería hacer pública
Collins Complete Spanish Electronic Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers 2011