释义 |
promulgate
prom·ul·gate P0594600 (prŏm′əl-gāt′, prō-mŭl′gāt′)tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates 1. To make known to the public; popularize or advocate: "Franklin ... first promulgated the idea of free public libraries" (Elaine Wagner).2. To put (a law, for example) into effect by formal public announcement. [Latin prōmulgāre, prōmulgāt-.] prom′ul·ga′tion (prŏm′əl-gā′shən, prō′məl-) n.prom′ul·ga′tor n.promulgate (ˈprɒməlˌɡeɪt) vb (tr) 1. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) to put into effect (a law, decree, etc), esp by formal proclamation2. to announce or declare officially3. to make widespread Also (archaic): promulge [C16: from Latin prōmulgāre to bring to public knowledge; probably related to provulgāre to publicize, from pro-1 + vulgāre to make common, from vulgus the common people] ˌpromulˈgation n ˈpromulˌgator nprom•ul•gate (ˈprɒm əlˌgeɪt, proʊˈmʌl geɪt) v.t. -gat•ed, -gat•ing. 1. to put into operation (a law, decree of a court, etc.) by formal proclamation. 2. to set forth or teach publicly (a creed, doctrine, etc.). [1520–30; < Latin prōmulgātus, past participle of prōmulgāre to make known] prom`ul•ga′tion, n. prom′ul•ga`tor, n. promulgate Past participle: promulgated Gerund: promulgating
Imperative |
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promulgate | promulgate |
Present |
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I promulgate | you promulgate | he/she/it promulgates | we promulgate | you promulgate | they promulgate |
Preterite |
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I promulgated | you promulgated | he/she/it promulgated | we promulgated | you promulgated | they promulgated |
Present Continuous |
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I am promulgating | you are promulgating | he/she/it is promulgating | we are promulgating | you are promulgating | they are promulgating |
Present Perfect |
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I have promulgated | you have promulgated | he/she/it has promulgated | we have promulgated | you have promulgated | they have promulgated |
Past Continuous |
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I was promulgating | you were promulgating | he/she/it was promulgating | we were promulgating | you were promulgating | they were promulgating |
Past Perfect |
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I had promulgated | you had promulgated | he/she/it had promulgated | we had promulgated | you had promulgated | they had promulgated |
Future |
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I will promulgate | you will promulgate | he/she/it will promulgate | we will promulgate | you will promulgate | they will promulgate |
Future Perfect |
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I will have promulgated | you will have promulgated | he/she/it will have promulgated | we will have promulgated | you will have promulgated | they will have promulgated |
Future Continuous |
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I will be promulgating | you will be promulgating | he/she/it will be promulgating | we will be promulgating | you will be promulgating | they will be promulgating |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been promulgating | you have been promulgating | he/she/it has been promulgating | we have been promulgating | you have been promulgating | they have been promulgating |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been promulgating | you will have been promulgating | he/she/it will have been promulgating | we will have been promulgating | you will have been promulgating | they will have been promulgating |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been promulgating | you had been promulgating | he/she/it had been promulgating | we had been promulgating | you had been promulgating | they had been promulgating |
Conditional |
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I would promulgate | you would promulgate | he/she/it would promulgate | we would promulgate | you would promulgate | they would promulgate |
Past Conditional |
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I would have promulgated | you would have promulgated | he/she/it would have promulgated | we would have promulgated | you would have promulgated | they would have promulgated | ThesaurusVerb | 1. | promulgate - state or announce; "`I am not a Communist,' he exclaimed"; "The King will proclaim an amnesty"exclaim, proclaimdeclare - proclaim one's support, sympathy, or opinion for or against; "His wife declared at once for moving to the West Coast"trumpet - proclaim on, or as if on, a trumpet; "Liberals like to trumpet their opposition to the death penalty"clarion - proclaim on, or as if on, a clariondeclare - state emphatically and authoritatively; "He declared that he needed more money to carry out the task he was charged with" | | 2. | promulgate - put a law into effect by formal declarationannounce, declare - announce publicly or officially; "The President declared war" |
promulgateverb1. make known, issue, announce, publish, spread, promote, advertise, broadcast, communicate, proclaim, circulate, notify, make public, disseminate Such behaviour promulgates a negative image of the British.2. make official, pass, declare, decree bills limiting the FDA's authority to promulgate such regulationspromulgateverb1. To bring to public notice or make known publicly:advertise, announce, annunciate, broadcast, declare, proclaim, publish.2. To make (information) generally known:advertise, blaze, blazon, broadcast, bruit, circulate, disseminate, noise, propagate, spread.Idioms: spread far and wide, spread the word.3. To put in force or cause to be by legal authority:constitute, enact, establish, legislate, make.Translations EncyclopediaSeePromulgationPromulgate
PromulgateTo officially announce, to publish, to make known to the public; to formally announce a statute or a decision by a court. promulgate
Synonyms for promulgateverb make knownSynonyms- make known
- issue
- announce
- publish
- spread
- promote
- advertise
- broadcast
- communicate
- proclaim
- circulate
- notify
- make public
- disseminate
verb make officialSynonyms- make official
- pass
- declare
- decree
Synonyms for promulgateverb to bring to public notice or make known publiclySynonyms- advertise
- announce
- annunciate
- broadcast
- declare
- proclaim
- publish
verb to make (information) generally knownSynonyms- advertise
- blaze
- blazon
- broadcast
- bruit
- circulate
- disseminate
- noise
- propagate
- spread
verb to put in force or cause to be by legal authoritySynonyms- constitute
- enact
- establish
- legislate
- make
Synonyms for promulgateverb state or announceSynonymsRelated Wordsverb put a law into effect by formal declarationRelated Words |