0 past simple and past participle of promulgate
1 to spread beliefs or ideas among a lot of people
2 to announce something publicly, especially a new law:
After all, these regulations were promulgated quite late.
Local governments even promulgated over 600 rules to protect the environment.
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.
Isolated individual physicians had very limited means to contradict the interpretations and evaluations promulgated by the central producer-coordinator.