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Inflections of 公募

Plain
Polite
Form
Affirmative
Negative
Affirmative
Negative
Basics
Dictionary form — present & future
公募する
こうぼする
公募しない
こうぼしない
公募します
こうぼします
公募しません
こうぼしません
Completed — 'did, was'
公募した
こうぼした
公募しなかった
こうぼしなかった
公募しました
こうぼしました
公募しませんでした
こうぼしませんでした
Connector — 'and…', requests
公募して
こうぼして
公募しなくて
こうぼしなくて
公募しまして
こうぼしまして
公募しませんで
こうぼしませんで
Bare stem — builds other forms
公募
こうぼ
Volition & command
'Let's' / intention
公募しよう
こうぼしよう
公募するまい
こうぼするまい
公募しましょう
こうぼしましょう
公募しますまい
こうぼしますまい
Blunt command — 'do it!'
公募しろ
こうぼしろ
公募する
こうぼする
公募しなさい
こうぼしなさい
公募しなさるな
こうぼしなさるな
Voice & causation
Ability — 'can do'
公募できる
こうぼできる
公募できない
こうぼできない
公募できます
こうぼできます
公募できません
こうぼできません
Done to the subject — 'is …-ed'
公募される
こうぼされる
公募されない
こうぼされない
公募されます
こうぼされます
公募されません
こうぼされません
Make / let someone do
公募させる
こうぼさせる
公募させない
こうぼさせない
公募させます
こうぼさせます
公募させません
こうぼさせません
Made to do (unwillingly)
公募させられる
こうぼさせられる
公募させられない
こうぼさせられない
公募させられます
こうぼさせられます
公募させられません
こうぼさせられません
Conditionals
'If' condition (~eba)
公募すれば
こうぼすれば
公募しなければ
こうぼしなければ
公募しますなら
こうぼしますなら
公募しませんなら
こうぼしませんなら
'When / if' (~tara)
公募したら
こうぼしたら
公募しなかったら
こうぼしなかったら
公募しましたら
こうぼしましたら
公募しませんでしたら
こうぼしませんでしたら
List actions among others (~tari)
公募したり
こうぼしたり
公募しなかったり
こうぼしなかったり
公募しましたり
こうぼしましたり
公募しませんでしたり
こうぼしませんでしたり

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Common N1
Pitch accent
Heiban (平板型)
Atamadaka (頭高型)
Meaning
  1. 1
    English · JMdict
    public appeal (e.g. for contributions);public advertisement (of a post);open recruitment
  2. 2
    public offering (of securities)
  3. 3
    English · Wikipedia

    A public offering is the offering of securities of a company or a similar corporation to the public. Generally, the securities are to be listed on a stock exchange. In most jurisdictions, a public offering requires the issuing company to publish a prospectus detailing the terms and rights attached to the offered security, as well as information on the company itself and its finances. Many other regulatory requirements surround any public offering and they vary according to jurisdiction. Initial public offering (IPO) is one type of public offering. Not all public offerings are IPOs. An IPO occurs only when a company offers its shares (not other securities) for the first time for public ownership and trading, an act making it a public company. However, public offerings are also made by already-listed companies. The company issues additional securities to the public, adding to those currently being traded. For example, a listed company with 8 million shares outstanding can offer to the public another 2 million shares. This is a public offering but not an IPO. Once the transaction is complete, the company will have 10 million shares outstanding. Non-initial public offering of equity is also called seasoned equity offering. A shelf prospectus is often used by companies in exactly that situation. Instead of drafting one before each public offering, the company can file a single prospectus detailing the terms of many different securities it might offer in the next several years. Shortly before the offering (if any) actually takes place, the company informs the public of material changes in its finances and outlook since the publication of the shelf prospectus. Other types of securities, besides shares, can be offered publicly. Bonds, warrants, capital notes and many other kinds of debt and equity vehicles are offered, issued and traded in public capital markets. A private company, with no shares listed publicly, can still issue other securities to the public and have them traded on an exchange. A public company, of course, may also offer and list other securities alongside its shares. Most public offerings are in the primary market, that is, the issuing company itself is the offerer of securities to the public. The offered securities are then issued (allocated, allotted) to the new owners. If it is an offering of shares, this means that the company's outstanding capital grows. If it is an offering of other securities, this entails the creation or expansion of a series (of bonds, warrants, etc.). However, more rarely, public offerings take place in the secondary market. This is called a secondary market offering: existing security holders offer to sell their stake to other, new owners, through the stock exchange. The offerer is different from the issuer (the company). A secondary market offering is still a public offering with much the same requirements, including a prospectus. The services of an underwriter are often used to conduct a public offering.

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Grammar codex

What the coloured tags mean

Hiragana

ひらがな

The rounded, flowing kana. Hiragana writes native Japanese words, grammar endings, and anything without (or alongside) kanji — it's the first script you learn. Each character stands for one syllable.

Example

ねこ — cat