Publicly available but privately owned Ask Question Asked 9 years ago Modified 8 years, 1 month ago
HARRIS COUNTY, Texas (KTRK) -- A Harris County Sheriff's Office sergeant was arrested at work and is now being held in the Harris County Jail, according to online records. Multiple law enforcement ...
I would accept only "publicly" as being correct. I'm surprised that you found dictionaries listing "publically" as anything other than a mis-spelling of "publicly". If this alternative spelling does become commonplace, there's still no difference in their meaning; they are, after all, alternative spellings of the same word, not different-but-similar words. Update: In the 2-and-a-half years ...
My natural instinct is to hyphenate expressions such as "currently-available", "currently-implemented", etc., when they modify a noun. Example: "the currently-available version of X". It seems to me
But if 'publicly listed' is intended as an additional optional attribute, then including a second parallel construction explicitly stating the other set of options would be good: Data were collected from all housing developers: micro, small, and large, publicly and privately listed.
What is the word to describe someone who does not care about other people socially and publicly, that is a word or phrase which could describe behaviors such as littering, cutting in a line, talking on a phone in a theater, or arbitrarily and capriciously changing lanes when driving.
But here the question is, Why does bravely (built from brave) take a single L in the suffix -ly whereas dynamically (built from dynamic) take a double-L in the suffix -ally? Perhaps a more useful way to frame the question might be to ask, Why do we say dynamically (from dynamic) but publicly (from public)?