0 in secret, or with only one or two other people present: --
1 by a person or company and not by the government: --
2 not said or done officially or publicly: --
speak/meet privately (with sb) He met privately with his administrative team late in the day.
say/acknowledge/admit privately Officials privately admitted that the data was unreliable.
3 owned or financed by a company or group of people, rather than by the government: --
States or central banks were then forced to organize bailouts and to socialize the costs of privately undertaken risks.
However, in our model some members of society are constrained and are unable to save privately.
They can be produced informally, commercially or publicly, and consumed privately or collectively.
Facts represent beliefs in which the agent has confidence; facts and beliefs may be held privately or be shared.
There is a common shock to the electorate about which each voter is imperfectly and privately informed.
Capitalism is an economic system in which ' the means of production and the capacity to work are owned privately and there are markets in both'.
Our research, then, found childcaring ar rangements characterised by being non-monetised, based on personal family relations and privately organised.
Efforts at raising funds privately began in 1898, but were not very successful.