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Definitions

disseminate

[dih-sem-uh-neyt] / dɪˈsɛm əˌneɪt /


Example Sentences

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On Friday, Nestle refuted the accusations made by the watchdog, saying it reserved the right to respond in court "if Foodwatch continues to disseminate misleading information".

From Barron's Jan. 31, 2026

He was too modest to add that if you don’t have good people to collect and disseminate it, you can’t have the good data.

From The Wall Street Journal Jan. 15, 2026

And it formed a coalition with Turning Point USA, Hillsdale College, PragerU and dozens of other conservative groups to disseminate patriotic programming.

From Salon Oct. 9, 2025

This includes a claim that Meta AI is allowed to disseminate false information about celebrities, as long as it provides a disclaimer that says the information provided is not accurate.

From BBC Aug. 18, 2025

Although the Americans leave Manila in the hands of the Japanese—temporarily, at least—and the Propaganda Corps works tirelessly to disseminate their messages, the Imperial Japanese Army struggles in the first months of the occupation.

From "At Last She Stood" by Erin Entrada Kelly

Much of that money has been routed through a nonprofit judicial advocacy group Leo founded — now called The 85 Fund — which both receives and disseminates Leo’s funding.

From Salon Apr. 10, 2026

The letter said that project was aimed at assessing how the Secret Service identifies, receives, disseminates and operationalizes intelligence concerning threats to the officials it protects.

From The Wall Street Journal Mar. 3, 2026

“If a city in a country wants to promote its tourism, its culture, that’s a very different thing from a paid advertisement that disseminates discriminatory messages,” she said.

From Los Angeles Times Apr. 21, 2025

The organization referenced by Mr. Jacobs is the Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade, or CAFT, a group that selects targets and disseminates information and resources to anti-fur activists on the ground.

From New York Times Jun. 3, 2024

No amount of ordinary instruction in science will remedy the evils caused by want of original inquiry, because such instruction does not produce new knowledge, but only disseminates that already possessed.

From The Scientific Basis of National Progress Including that of Morality by Gore, George

According to his death certificate, Busch died from hemorrhagic shock and disseminated intravascular coagulation after complications from bacterial pneumonia led to sepsis.

From Los Angeles Times Jun. 5, 2026

She continued: "The more we are investigating this outbreak, the more we realise that it has already disseminated at least a little bit across border and also in other provinces."

From BBC May 19, 2026

The church denies that the aim of the lawsuit is to silence a popular maverick whose content is widely disseminated by critics of Mormonism.

From Salon Apr. 29, 2026

The unprecedented quantity and detail of battlefield data requires changes to how intelligence is collected, analyzed and disseminated.

From The Wall Street Journal Apr. 7, 2026

Such a secret could not be widely disseminated, as there would be no point in making gold if everyone was at it.

From "The Invention of Science" by David Wootton

A U.A.E. official said disseminating inaccurate information can incite panic and cost lives in times of crisis.

From The Wall Street Journal Mar. 17, 2026

“What I can say with absolute certainty is that the DOJ did a terrible job when they were disseminating these files,” Hersh said.

From Salon Feb. 10, 2026

"Existing methods of supporting children and young people with special needs should be evaluated with a view to disseminating good practice and reducing the current over-reliance on classroom assistants," it said.

From BBC Feb. 3, 2026

They also agreed to "refrain from disseminating or promoting false information" in a bid to "foster an environment conducive to peaceful dialogue".

From Barron's Oct. 26, 2025

Thus the category ‘discovery’ proved to be capable of disseminating across the various local cultures of Renaissance Europe, but it did not fare well elsewhere.

From "The Invention of Science" by David Wootton




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