Idioms for public
Origin of public
1400–50; < Latin
pūblicus (earlier
pōblicus, pōplicus, akin to
populus
people); replacing late Middle English
publique < Middle French < Latin, as above
OTHER WORDS FROM public
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH public
pubic publicWords nearby public
British Dictionary definitions for go public
public
/ (ˈpʌblɪk) /
adjective
noun
the community or people in general
a part or section of the community grouped because of a common interest, activity, etc
the racing public
Word Origin for public
C15: from Latin
pūblicus, changed from
pōplicus of the people, from
populus people
Idioms and Phrases with go public (1 of 2)
go public
Become a publicly held company, that is, issue ownership shares in the form of stock. For example, As soon as the company grows a little bigger and begins to show a profit, we intend to go public. [Mid-1900s]
Idioms and Phrases with go public (2 of 2)
public
see go public; in public; in the public eye; John Doe (Q. Public); wash one's dirty linen in public.