The word "publish" is correct and usable in written English. You can use the word "publish" when you want to say that information or work is formally made available to the public. For example, "The author published her first book last month.".
The impetus is now on funders to support early career researchers when making decisions about where to publish, and on publishers to offer appropriate open access homes for their research.
In September, I emailed: Since you've chosen not to publish based on the information we have and we're not actively pursuing any more information, then I think it's reasonable to conclude that The Star is passing on this story.
The society doesn't publish a list of its members, although I have a copy of its 2013 membership list.
Why did you decide to publish? "I suppose the answer is that I'm a professional writer and I like making books.
"We no longer wanted to be the place, the repository where those data lived, because we couldn't guarantee that they were methodologically rigorous enough for us to actually publish," said Erica L Smith, chief of BJS's law enforcement statistics unit.
But as long as firms are now prepared to publish such evidence, it is surely worth considering whether any of them were indeed experimenting discreetly with techniques that outperformed the public numbers.
For the past 15 months, the blog has been used by the minister to publish his portfolio media releases.
When I feel like I can't trust my brain 100%, Ludwig really comes in handy. It makes me translate and proofread faster and my output more reliable.
Claudia Letizia
Head Translator and Proofreader @ organictranslations.eu