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).

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1563–87.  Foxe, A. & M. (1596), 1085/1. He did euulgate and disperse abroad … great numbers of bookes.

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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.

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1822.  Blackw. Mag., XII. 656/2. They may permit younger sisters in the craft to evulgate what they may have ‘lisped in numbers?’

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1831.  Fraser’s Mag., IV. 177/2. Haller, in 1732, evulgated the first edition of his Swiss poems.

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