(Redirected from Gazetted)
The term 'gazette' normally refers to a
newspaper.
In the governments of
Commonwealth countries, a gazette is an official
journal that publishes the texts of the new
laws and government decisions.
The word comes from ''gazzetta'', a
Venetian coin used to buy early Italian newspapers; the coin became a name for the papers themselves. The word was
loaned into
English to describe a newspaper. "Gazette" came to be used for an official government paper with the creation of the ''
London Gazette'', first published in
1665 under the title of ''The Oxford Gazette''. This was one of the first publications in the world that could be termed a "newspaper". The ''
Edinburgh Gazette'' came into existence in
1699 and the ''
Belfast Gazette'' appeared in
1921.
In some countries, publication in the official gazette is a condition for official documentation to
come into effect and be released in the
public domain.
"Gazette", by extension, has come to be used as the name of mainstream newspapers in the print media, such as the ''
Montreal Gazette'' (for others in this genre, see
The Gazette).
The word "gazette" is also used as a
transitive verb, meaning to announce or publish in a gazette: "
Lake Nakuru was gazetted as a bird sanctuary in 1960, then was upgraded to
National Park status in 1968."