v. Obs. or arch. [f. L. ēvulgāt- ppl. stem of ēvulgāre, f. ē- out + vulgāre to spread among the multitude, f. vulgus the multitude.] trans. To send out among the people, make commonly known or public; to divulge; to circulate, publish (a book).
156387. Foxe, A. & M. (1596), 1085/1. He did euulgate and disperse abroad great numbers of bookes.
1804. W. Taylor, in Ann. Rev., II. 689. Anecdotes in which many amusing particulars occur that had not before been compiled, or at least not evulgated here.
1822. Blackw. Mag., XII. 656/2. They may permit younger sisters in the craft to evulgate what they may have lisped in numbers?
1831. Frasers Mag., IV. 177/2. Haller, in 1732, evulgated the first edition of his Swiss poems.