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Definitions

contagion

[kuhn-tey-juhn] / kənˈteɪ dʒən /


Example Sentences

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Other bouts of frenetic, rollercoaster volatility occurred during the Asian contagion of 1997, the dot-com crash of 2000-2001, the global financial crisis in 2008 and the pandemic in 2020.

From MarketWatch • Jun. 9, 2026

“But this is far from a structural contagion of any sort for the overall space economy.”

From MarketWatch • Jun. 2, 2026

In cases of human-to-human transmission, existing knowledge about environmental factors relating to contagion from rodents "does not apply," infectious disease specialist Maria Ester Lazaro told AFP.

From Barron's • May 15, 2026

But WHO officials insisted that the risk of wider contagion was low "because of how the virus works".

From BBC • May 11, 2026

The people who yawned when they saw you yawn, meanwhile, were infected by the sight of you yawning — which is a second kind of contagion.

From "The Tipping Point" by Malcolm Gladwell




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