0 present participle of promulgate --
1 to spread beliefs or ideas among a lot of people --
2 to announce something publicly, especially a new law: --
Specifying and promulgating achievement standards.
The convergence in groupings should be seen as central, neither a happy fortuity when meanings are officially set nor an important product of promulgating the official meaning.
A form of display that catered to the performer's vanity, ornamentation was also seen as promulgating a self-interest that broke down social ties on the practical level.
As has been said, ordinar y people gain a certain amount of guidance just by knowing about judicial decisions, and officials depend upon that fact in promulgating those decisions.
Additionally, in the years following the epidemics, the government sponsored a large-scale project of revising, printing, and promulgating medical books.
Moreover, significant progress had been made in rewriting past gender discriminatory laws and promulgating new legislation.
Communication is involved in promulgating law, and communication depends upon common, shared understandings.
So social salience theory supports the rationality of the practice of promulgating statutes under more circumstances than do applied semantic realism and intentionalism.