0 past simple and past participle of propagate
2 to spread opinions, lies, or beliefs among a lot of people:
3 to send out or spread light or sound waves, movement, etc., or to be sent out or spread:
The specific case under investigation here pertains to the acoustic analogues of articulatory coordination, and how they are propagated and perhaps reanalysed by recipients.
If the nominal value of the variable has significant meaning for the propagated intervals, the second alternative will be chosen.
As a vegetatively propagated crop, seed quality is more important for potatoes than for cereals or pulses.
It is required that intense laser beams be propagated through long-scale underdense plasmas to achieve successful controlled nuclear fusion.
Changes have propagated through benthic invertebrates, with the macrofauna changing from echinoids and large clams to opportunistic brittle stars and polychaetes.
The 1955 drawing embodied the historical conditions that produced it, and became the tool that propagated the impact of these conditions to the present day.
Such bacteria are not detected by visual assessment of plant cultures and are propagated together with the plant material.
Furthermore, a transmission policy is used to describe how a query with a target meta-document should be propagated in the network.