0 to spread beliefs or ideas among a lot of people
1 to announce something publicly, especially a new law:
An ordinance was promulgated that facilitated its acquisition.
Only by doing so can rational and effective preventive and control measures be promulgated in the future.
Certain new bye-laws and rules were promulgated and many existing ones were modified.
In such a situation the divine command would be promulgated as a divine command.
Many more schemes were promulgated in subsequent years.
Moreover, the rationality of promulgating statutes-provided there are always simplest cases-follows automatically.
Isolated individual physicians had very limited means to contradict the interpretations and evaluations promulgated by the central producer-coordinator.
The two laws were promulgated at the same time.