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单词 disseminate
释义

Definition of disseminate in English:

disseminate

verb dɪˈsɛmɪneɪtdəˈsɛməˌneɪt
[with object]
  • 1Spread (something, especially information) widely.

    散布,传播(某物,尤指信息)

    health authorities should foster good practice by disseminating information

    卫生部门应该通过传播信息的方法鼓励好的做法。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Websites are not only used to disseminate information and propaganda.
    • This process provided a key link for ensuring that any required education or competency changes were made and disseminated.
    • Privacy is violated if data are collected or disseminated without participants' knowledge.
    • Instead of using technology to improve our lives and as a means to disseminate public information, it will be used to restrict our freedoms, and peer into our private lives.
    • Next, such knowledge needs to be disseminated throughout the organization.
    • It also provides an opportunity for disseminating information and awareness about Indian handicraft to people of all ages.
    • Much of the new investment in journalism today - much of the information revolution generally - is in disseminating the news, not in collecting it.
    • That's our job, is to disseminate information to the public.
    • Many people in the sustainable agriculture community have been instrumental in publishing and disseminating factual information to counter these myths.
    • The alert quickly disseminates information to highway billboards, broadcasters and newspapers.
    • The refugees from Byzantium carried with them a wealth of books - just in time for them to be printed and disseminated throughout western Europe.
    • Some of those tapes were made four years ago, and some of those tapes have been clearly made for disseminating information.
    • I'm retired from the military, and know the value of sometimes disseminating false information to the enemy.
    • As studies of organizational dynamics show, useful knowledge is not disseminated evenly throughout a business.
    • We also made sure that this information was widely disseminated.
    • There is growing interest in the dissemination of research results and concern for how important messages can be most efficiently disseminated.
    • Training programmes will enable the trainers to further disseminate the information to others in the community, creating a multiplier effect.
    • Internet based media disseminate information and knowledge far more quickly than conventional media.
    • We sampled many more midwives than other health professionals because they provided most antenatal care and disseminated most of the leaflets.
    • These were agreed at a national consensus conference and were subsequently widely disseminated throughout the country.
    Synonyms
    spread, circulate, distribute, disperse, diffuse, proclaim, promulgate, propagate, publicize, communicate, pass on, make known, put about
    dissipate, scatter
    broadcast, put on the air/airwaves, publish
    herald, trumpet
    literary bruit abroad/about
    1. 1.1usually as adjective disseminated Spread throughout an organ or the body.
      (在器官或身体里)扩散的
      disseminated colonic cancer

      已扩散的结肠癌。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • I felt a cold breeze surge through my entire body as I froze; it disseminated through me like a plague, burying deep in my soul.
      • Acid is rapidly disseminated throughout the bronchial tree, producing a chemical pneumonitis within minutes.
      • The hepatic tumor had disseminated to the peritoneum, forming multiple nodules up to 9 cm in diameter.
      • The lymphoma is usually extensively disseminated at presentation.
      • They rarely cause invasive disease, but can invade and disseminate in immunocompromised patients.
      • The tumor disseminated early to the lungs, lymph nodes, bone marrow, and spleen and ran a fulminant course.
      • Sulphide mineralization in these deposits tends to be disseminated throughout the body and is dominated by pyrrhotite and pentlandite phases.
      • The condition can disseminate throughout the respiratory tract and lead to pulmonary papillomatosis.
      • Patients who have severe comorbidity particularly renal insufficiency, hepatic failure, or disseminated malignancy have a poor prognosis.
      • When hemolyzed red blood cells are reinfused, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy can be triggered.
      • However, some kind of pharmacological intervention is often considered as a last resort, particularly when cancer has already disseminated.
      • A coagulation profile should be obtained to rule out disseminated intravascular coagulation.
      • Most metallic sulphides are amorphous and disseminated throughout the sinter, instead of forming distinct mineral phases.
      • As a result, disseminated and extra-pulmonary disease is more commonly seen.
      • In immunocompromised patients, disseminated fungal infections may produce nodular lesions.
      • This tumor disseminated early and pursued a highly aggressive course.
      • In immunocompromised patients, disseminated herpes simplex virus infection must be considered.
      • The irregular topography of this bedding surface is covered by a thin veneer of micrite with limonite disseminated throughout.
      • The lymphatic system disseminates fluids and proteins throughout the body to prevent swelling.
      • This bacterium causes infections in the genital tract that may disseminate to organs.

Derivatives

  • disseminator

  • noun dɪˈsɛmɪneɪtədəˈsɛməˌneɪdər
    • ‘As preservers and disseminators of heritage, museums are crucial for building strong communities with strong identities,’ he suggests.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Instead of being creators, custodians and disseminators of knowledge they become part of a network of players contributing to problems often identified by external organisations or communities.
      • The faculty today have moved up from being knowledge disseminators to knowledge creators.
      • Women appear to be effective disseminators of information; program planners can utilize this valuable information when planning the recruitment stage of future programs.
      • Ms Rhode said: ‘It is all guesswork because Lowry was a disseminator, he liked to play games with people and tell them what they wanted to hear.’

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin disseminat- 'scattered', from the verb disseminare, from dis- 'abroad' + semen, semin- 'seed'.

  • sow from Old English:

    Sow, in the sense to plant is Old English and had the sense ‘disseminate’ from early on. The image of disseminate (Late Middle English) is the same, for it comes from Latin semen (Late Middle English) meaning ‘seed’. Seed (Old English) in turn comes from the same Germanic root as sow. The differently pronounced sow that is the female pig is also Old English, and goes back to an Indo-European root shared by Latis sus and Greek hus which suggests they were on the menu for our early ancestors.

Rhymes

ingeminate, inseminate

Definition of disseminate in US English:

disseminate

verbdəˈseməˌnātdəˈsɛməˌneɪt
[with object]
  • 1Spread or disperse (something, especially information) widely.

    散布,传播(某物,尤指信息)

    health authorities should foster good practice by disseminating information

    卫生部门应该通过传播信息的方法鼓励好的做法。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Next, such knowledge needs to be disseminated throughout the organization.
    • Websites are not only used to disseminate information and propaganda.
    • That's our job, is to disseminate information to the public.
    • Some of those tapes were made four years ago, and some of those tapes have been clearly made for disseminating information.
    • The refugees from Byzantium carried with them a wealth of books - just in time for them to be printed and disseminated throughout western Europe.
    • The alert quickly disseminates information to highway billboards, broadcasters and newspapers.
    • Privacy is violated if data are collected or disseminated without participants' knowledge.
    • Internet based media disseminate information and knowledge far more quickly than conventional media.
    • Many people in the sustainable agriculture community have been instrumental in publishing and disseminating factual information to counter these myths.
    • Much of the new investment in journalism today - much of the information revolution generally - is in disseminating the news, not in collecting it.
    • I'm retired from the military, and know the value of sometimes disseminating false information to the enemy.
    • We sampled many more midwives than other health professionals because they provided most antenatal care and disseminated most of the leaflets.
    • Training programmes will enable the trainers to further disseminate the information to others in the community, creating a multiplier effect.
    • There is growing interest in the dissemination of research results and concern for how important messages can be most efficiently disseminated.
    • As studies of organizational dynamics show, useful knowledge is not disseminated evenly throughout a business.
    • We also made sure that this information was widely disseminated.
    • These were agreed at a national consensus conference and were subsequently widely disseminated throughout the country.
    • It also provides an opportunity for disseminating information and awareness about Indian handicraft to people of all ages.
    • This process provided a key link for ensuring that any required education or competency changes were made and disseminated.
    • Instead of using technology to improve our lives and as a means to disseminate public information, it will be used to restrict our freedoms, and peer into our private lives.
    Synonyms
    spread, circulate, distribute, disperse, diffuse, proclaim, promulgate, propagate, publicize, communicate, pass on, make known, put about
    1. 1.1usually as adjective disseminated Spread throughout an organ or the body.
      (在器官或身体里)扩散的
      disseminated colonic cancer

      已扩散的结肠癌。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • This bacterium causes infections in the genital tract that may disseminate to organs.
      • I felt a cold breeze surge through my entire body as I froze; it disseminated through me like a plague, burying deep in my soul.
      • As a result, disseminated and extra-pulmonary disease is more commonly seen.
      • A coagulation profile should be obtained to rule out disseminated intravascular coagulation.
      • They rarely cause invasive disease, but can invade and disseminate in immunocompromised patients.
      • The lymphatic system disseminates fluids and proteins throughout the body to prevent swelling.
      • Sulphide mineralization in these deposits tends to be disseminated throughout the body and is dominated by pyrrhotite and pentlandite phases.
      • The irregular topography of this bedding surface is covered by a thin veneer of micrite with limonite disseminated throughout.
      • However, some kind of pharmacological intervention is often considered as a last resort, particularly when cancer has already disseminated.
      • When hemolyzed red blood cells are reinfused, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy can be triggered.
      • This tumor disseminated early and pursued a highly aggressive course.
      • The lymphoma is usually extensively disseminated at presentation.
      • The hepatic tumor had disseminated to the peritoneum, forming multiple nodules up to 9 cm in diameter.
      • The condition can disseminate throughout the respiratory tract and lead to pulmonary papillomatosis.
      • Acid is rapidly disseminated throughout the bronchial tree, producing a chemical pneumonitis within minutes.
      • Patients who have severe comorbidity particularly renal insufficiency, hepatic failure, or disseminated malignancy have a poor prognosis.
      • In immunocompromised patients, disseminated herpes simplex virus infection must be considered.
      • In immunocompromised patients, disseminated fungal infections may produce nodular lesions.
      • Most metallic sulphides are amorphous and disseminated throughout the sinter, instead of forming distinct mineral phases.
      • The tumor disseminated early to the lungs, lymph nodes, bone marrow, and spleen and ran a fulminant course.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin disseminat- ‘scattered’, from the verb disseminare, from dis- ‘abroad’ + semen, semin- ‘seed’.

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更新时间:2024/12/27 18:13:14