Advertise
To make something known generally or in public, especially in order to sell it [Cambridge Dictionary].
The verb advertise means to publicize a service or product in order to try to get you to buy or use it. If you see people eating delicious-looking chocolate in a television commercial, for example, you'll probably want to buy it.
You don't have to use television, radio, or print media to advertise something — or even try to sell it at all. In fact, the word advertise can also simply mean to call attention to something. Your neighbours might advertise their lottery win by parking flashy cars in the driveway and having an endless supply of packages delivered to their houses [Vocabulary.com].
If you advertise something such as a product, an event, or a job, you tell people about it online, in newspapers, on television, or on posters in order to encourage them to buy the product, go to the event, or apply for the job.
If you advertise for someone to do something for you, for example to work for you or share your accommodation, you announce it online, in a newspaper, on television, or on a notice board. If someone or something advertises a particular quality, they show it in their appearance or behavior.
If you do not advertise the fact that something is the case, you try not to let other people know about it [Collins Dictionary].
Advertise. Cambridge Dictionary. Retrieved from: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/advertise
Advertise. Vocabulary.com. Retrieved from: https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/advertise
Advertise. Collins Dictionary. Retrieved from: https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/advertise