MSN: Cabarrus County must publicly admit breaking public comment rules after settlement
Cabarrus County must publicly acknowledge it misspoke about its public comment rules and train new commissioners after settling a federal free-speech lawsuit. The settlement resolves a lawsuit filed ...
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Charlotte Observer: Cabarrus County ends ‘draconian’ comment rules about cursing, personal attacks
Cabarrus County commissioners voted 4-1 on Tuesday night to approve a new public-participation policy that rolls back restrictions on what residents can say at board meetings, a move commissioners ...
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
Assuming that this wasn't an error because it went into production and was shown publicly, does this mean the rule of putting the apostrophe after the letter 's' for possessive was different before?
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.
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)?