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promulgation

[ UK /pɹˌɒməlɡˈe‍ɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. the formal act of proclaiming; giving public notice
    his promulgation of the policy proved to be premature
  2. the official announcement of a new law or ordinance whereby the law or ordinance is put into effect
  3. a public statement containing information about an event that has happened or is going to happen
    the promulgation was written in English
    the announcement appeared in the local newspaper

How To Use promulgation In A Sentence

  • The promulgation of some important laws such as Labor Contract Law and Mediation and Arbitration Law on Labor Disputes caused a certain impact on judicial practice of labor law area.
  • the promulgation was written in English
  • We presume that there was nothing whatever to have prevented him from concocting as many ballads as he chose; or from engaging, as engines of popular promulgation, the ancestors of those unshaven and raucous gentlemen, to whose canorous mercies we are wont, in times of political excitement, to intrust our own personal and patriotic ditties. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 61, No. 379, May, 1847
  • As President he had power and patronage enough to secure by intimidation and bribery the promulgation of a constitution which gave him autocratic power.
  • In her aluminum cast patio amal incumbency the promulgation of a tower hymenogastrales with the lama and unfilmed schinus of astylar. Rational Review
  • The gap between the promulgation of abstract standards and the controvertible application of those standards to particular cases is a persistent theme in constitutional adjudication.
  • The characteristics of image promulgation of jewelry enterprise are introduced.
  • Gladstone.] [Footnote 49: Cf. his _Histoire diplomatique de l'Europe_.] [Footnote 50: The promulgation was a surprise to him; it was also a defeat, as he had aimed at a direct understanding between Greeks and Bulgars and not at a solution which left the Porte as arbitrator between these two Christian races. The Birth of Yugoslavia, Volume 1
  • The promulgation of the accepted system of astronomy, called the Copernican system, which represents the earth as revolving on its axis and considers the sun as the centre of motion for the earth and other planets, marked the greatest of scientific revolutions. The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 09
  • Whereas, on the other hand, emanating as they do from the infinite wisdom and mercy of God, formulated in the shape of positive precepts, and corroborated by the portentous manner of their promulgation, those principles acquire an undisputed authority, remove every doubt, illumine the mind with unexpected sublime truths, satisfy the heart which finds them consentaneous with its own feelings, and are thus more apt to accomplish the objects towards which they are directed. A Guide for the Religious Instruction of Jewish Youth
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