41.   Press coordinator Laura Alexander went so far as to say that publicity was undesirable, which would seem to make her job superfluous.

42.   Pretrial publicity was the main reason cited Thursday by a New York appeals court for moving the trial of four New York City police officers to upstate Albany.

43.   Publicity is mostly word of mouth, though some said they were referred by doctors, a kind of prescription to combat loneliness and brain atrophy.

44.   Publicity can be a double-edged sword.

45.   Publicity has been word of mouth.

46.   Publicity was a problem for Calhoun when he coached Northeastern.

47.   Prizes are larger, publicity is wider and winners today gain far more attention than mere runners-up.

48.   Publicity has been fierce, and Wells has had to pick and choose engagements, with assistants helping handle the onslaught.

49.   She said the ensuing publicity was inevitable in such a tight-knit community.

50.   Sons betray fathers in unaccountable ways, and the only condition Hans Albert Einstein set was that there be no publicity.

n. + be >>共 1635
problem 0.82%
people 0.79%
company 0.71%
result 0.67%
thing 0.63%
report 0.57%
question 0.56%
official 0.55%
time 0.53%
issue 0.48%
publicity 0%
publicity + v. >>共 166
be 20.04%
help 6.25%
make 3.66%
have 2.80%
do 2.37%
prompt 2.16%
lead 2.16%
force 1.94%
hurt 1.72%
surround 1.72%
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