From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishadvertad‧vert1 /ˈædvɜːt $ -ɜːrt/ ●●○ S3 noun [countable] BBAADVERTISE British English an advertisement► see thesaurus at advertisement
Examples from the Corpus
advert• Look through the classified adverts and nearly every classic car you see has been totally restored.• Corporate adverts, of course, present no such dangers.• They will kill traditional brand imagery as used in adverts by doing the buying and selling.• He did not even think of checking the job adverts, as he believed that his contacts would help him more.• Many adverts are specifically aimed at women, supposedly because they do most of the shopping.• We are now in a position to ask whether one type of advert typically uses one type of metaphor.• There was one advert for Boots No. 7 make-up and I thought it was great.• And a dream come true ... The advert for grandparents that came up trumps.advertad‧vert2 /ədˈvɜːt $ -ɜːrt/ verb → advert to something→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpus
advert• This statement represents the old doctrine in regard to obtaining property by false pretences, to which I shall advert presently.From Longman Business Dictionaryadvertad‧vert /ˈædvɜːt-ɜːrt/ British English noun [countable]MARKETING an informal word for advertisementOrigin advert (1400-1500) Early French advertir, from Latin advertere, from ad- “to” + vertere “to turn”