Take it up with people who define the term - I'm just using the standard definition (unlike you).
Except you are using one definition in one dictionary and interpreting it in a nonsensical way evidenced by your emphasis of the word "all"
You aren't really helping your argument are you VG, as you are making your claim more and more wrong. In reality when talking about the public liking this, or liking that, it is accepted that you'd expect the thing you claim they like to be liked by a large proportion of ordinary people. If something is liked by a small minority (e.g. 5%) it is completely wrong to claim this to be liked by the public.
You aren't really helping your argument PD by disagreeing with the dictionary definition that you linked to. Your dictionary definition defined the public as "
all the ordinary people" (your emphasis) and not just a large proportion, which is your personal preference of how to define "the public". Good to know that you are open to using terms in a different way from the dictionary.
You could otherwise claim that 'the public in the UK are muslims' - that statement is clearly non-sense even if maybe 3% of the population are muslim.
As they say - when in a hole, stop digging.
I suggest you take your advice and stop digging, given you just disagreed with your own link.
Let's just stick with talking about what the public
like rather than what the public
are. You do like your pointless discussions don't you.
I have already explained that by using the term "the public" I was not engaged in a numbers game to try to claim that most people like donating to churches. So we're in agreement that this is a minority of the public. "The public" just meant people from the public who use the services of the church and like to donate to them. It seemed a lot shorter to say "the public". So I'm going to carry on using it that way - if you don't like it being used in that way, oh well, free country and all that.
So, it seems registering church charities is not a high priority, especially as people seem to not mind donating even if the charities are not registered.