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: --
Those that existed were adopted late, promulgated half-heartedly, and so became subject to various claims of ownership from different social and political factions.
The two laws were promulgated at the same time.
Statutes are created and promulgated in writing, which removes some of these cues by itself.
Another condition is that if the statute is promulgated, it is promulgated in language in which its addressees are competent.
If continued ignorance is harmful, that harm is not being promulgated by the researchers - rather, it would continue anyway.
Professionalism is promulgated through mentorship and reinforced by self- and peer-assessment.
A second provision, promulgated shortly thereafter, was even more explicit.
Isolated individual physicians had very limited means to contradict the interpretations and evaluations promulgated by the central producer-coordinator.