to promulgate

listen to the pronunciation of to promulgate
English - English
To put into effect as a regulation
To make known or public
to proclaim
{v} to publish, to make known
If a new law is promulgated by a government or national leader, it is publicly approved or made official. A new constitution was promulgated last month. + promulgation prom·ul·ga·tion the promulgation of the constitution
= (1) To develop, publish and put into effect insurance rates or forms (2) To make public, by publishing or announcing, the fact that a statute or rule of court is a legal order or direction enforceable by law, and violation of such is punishable as provided by law
(1) To develop, publish and put into effect insurance rates or forms (2) To make public, by publishing or announcing, the fact that a statute or rule of court is a legal order or direction enforceable by law, and violation of such is punishable as provided by law (G,LE)
{f} proclaim, declare; publicize, advertise widely; publish, distribute widely
put a law into effect by formal declaration
If people promulgate a new law or a new idea, they make it widely known. The shipping industry promulgated a voluntary code
state or announce; "`I am not a Communist,' " he exclaimed; "The King will proclaim an amnesty"
To put into effect, as a regulation
To make known by open declaration, as laws, decrees, or tidings; to publish; as, to promulgate the secrets of a council
to promulgate

    Hyphenation

    to prom·ul·gate

    Turkish pronunciation

    tı prōmʌlgeyt

    Pronunciation

    /tə prōˈməlgāt/ /tə proʊˈmʌlɡeɪt/
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