Promulgate - meaning and definition. What is Promulgate
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What (who) is Promulgate - definition

ACT OF FORMALLY PROCLAIMING OR DECLARING A NEW STATUTORY OR ADMINISTRATIVE LAW AFTER ITS ENACTMENT
Promulagation; Promulgate; Promulgated; Promulgating

promulgate         
(promulgates, promulgating, promulgated)
1.
If people promulgate a new law or a new idea, they make it widely known. (FORMAL)
The shipping industry promulgated a voluntary code.
VERB: V n
2.
If a new law is promulgated by a government or national leader, it is publicly approved or made official. (FORMAL)
A new constitution was promulgated last month.
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed
promulgation
...the promulgation of the constitution.
N-UNCOUNT
promulgate         
['pr?m(?)lge?t]
¦ verb promote or make widely known.
?put (a law or decree) into effect by official proclamation.
Derivatives
promulgation noun
promulgator noun
Origin
C16 (earlier (C15) as promulgation): from L. promulgat-, promulgare, from pro- 'out, publicly' + mulgere 'cause to come forth' (lit. 'to milk').
promulgate         
v. a.
Publish, announce, proclaim, declare, advertise, bruit, trumpet, make known, blaze abroad, spread abroad, noise abroad, give notice of, make promulgation of, divulge.

Wikipedia

Promulgation

Promulgation is the formal proclamation or the declaration that a new statutory or administrative law is enacted after its final approval. In some jurisdictions, this additional step is necessary before the law can take effect.

After a new law is approved, it is announced to the public through the publication of government gazettes and/or on official government websites. National laws of extraordinary importance to the public may be announced by the head of state or head of government on a national broadcast. Local laws are usually announced in local newspapers and published in bulletins or compendia of municipal regulations.

Examples of use of Promulgate
1. "We were able to promulgate a lot of different regulations.
2. Also, the two Governments should promulgate financial and investment incentives to strengthen business ties. (VNA)
3. Now we must wait to see what interrogation rules the president will promulgate for the CIA.
4. And it disturbed me that people -- it always disturbs me when people promulgate falsehoods.
5. And it disturbed me that people –– it always disturbs me when people promulgate falsehoods.