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「public」が形容詞として使われる場合、公共の利益に関わる事柄や、一般の人々に開放されている状態を示す。具体的な例を以下に示す。
・例文「public」が名詞として使われる場合、一般の人々や社会全体を指す。具体的な例を以下に示す。
・例文| 接尾辞 | ||
|---|---|---|
| -ation | 次の意味を表す名詞語尾 1動作、行動 2結果の状態 3結果として生じた物 | |
対訳 公開用
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出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/03/18 01:57 UTC 版)
The adjective and noun are derived from Late 中期英語 publik, publike (“(adjective) generally observable, public; relating to the general public or public affairs; (noun) a generally observable place or situation”), from Anglo-Norman public, publik, publique, Middle French public, publique, and Old French public (“(adjective) generally observable, public; relating to the general public; official; (noun) community or its members collectively; nation, state; audience, spectators collectively”) (modern French public, publique (obsolete)); and from their etymon Latin pūblicus (“of or belonging to the community, people, or state; general, public”), an alteration of poplicus (influenced by pūbēs (“adult men; male population”)), from poplus (“community; the people, public; nation, state”) (later populus; from Proto-Italic *poplos (“army”); further origin uncertain, possibly from Etruscan or from Proto-Indo-European *pleh₁- (“to fill”)) + -icus (suffix meaning ‘of or pertaining to’). Related to people, populus, etc.
The 中期英語 word displaced native 古期英語 ceorlfolc and folclic.
The verb is derived from the adjective.
public (comparative more public, superlative most public)
public (countable and uncountable, plural publics)
public (third-person singular simple present publics, present participle publicking, simple past and past participle publicked)
Semantic loan from Russian па́блик (páblik) and Ukrainian па́блік (páblik, “public webpage on a blog or on social media”), both borrowed from English public: see etymology 1.
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the general public
the general public
the general public
the general public
the general public
世間体.
public decency
a public matter
public chatter
public sentiments
世論.
公有地.
名詞の変化形:
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