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Definition of Disseminative
1. Adjective. Spreading by diffusion.
Similar to: Distributive
Derivative terms: Diffuse, Diffuse, Disperse, Disperse, Disseminate
Definition of Disseminative
1. a. Tending to disseminate, or to become disseminated.
Definition of Disseminative
1. Adjective. Tending to disseminate, or to become disseminated. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Disseminative
Literary usage of Disseminative
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Monograph on Diseases of the Breast: Their Pathology and Treatment, with by William Roger Williams (1894)
"It is commonly used as synonymous with disseminative, whereas these two properties of
... Cancers are usually disseminative as well as malignant; yet, ..."
2. The Journal of Infectious Diseases by Infectious Diseases Society of America, John Rockefeller McCormick Memorial Fund, John McCormick Institute for Infectious Diseases (1915)
"Man, 40 years old, in House of Correction with delirium tremens. Death three days
after entrance. Anatomical Diagnosis.—disseminative syphilitic cerebral ..."
3. The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Jeremy Taylor by Jeremy Taylor, Charles Page Eden, Reginald Heber, Alexander Taylor (1852)
"But the reason of this is, not only because the effect of heresy is like the
plague, infectious' and disseminative; but because by how much the articles of ..."
4. Edinburgh Medical Journal (1887)
"The post-mortem examination revealed an inflamed condition of both lungs, with
multiple disseminative abscesses scattered throughout both these organs. ..."
5. The Call of the New South: Addresses Delivered at the Southern Sociological by James Edward McCulloch (1912)
"... than anywhere else, almost every one spits on the ground, often hastening the
drying and disseminative process by smearing it over with their feet? ..."
6. Yellow Fever, Considered in Its Historical, Pathological, Etiological, and by René La Roche (1855)
"Aerial currents, as productive and disseminative agents of febrile complaints,
produce their effects in several ways, both direct and indirect. ..."
7. A Monograph on Diseases of the Breast: Their Pathology and Treatment, with by William Roger Williams (1894)
"It is commonly used as synonymous with disseminative, whereas these two properties of
... Cancers are usually disseminative as well as malignant; yet, ..."
8. The Journal of Infectious Diseases by Infectious Diseases Society of America, John Rockefeller McCormick Memorial Fund, John McCormick Institute for Infectious Diseases (1915)
"Man, 40 years old, in House of Correction with delirium tremens. Death three days
after entrance. Anatomical Diagnosis.—disseminative syphilitic cerebral ..."
9. The Whole Works of the Right Rev. Jeremy Taylor by Jeremy Taylor, Charles Page Eden, Reginald Heber, Alexander Taylor (1852)
"But the reason of this is, not only because the effect of heresy is like the
plague, infectious' and disseminative; but because by how much the articles of ..."
10. Edinburgh Medical Journal (1887)
"The post-mortem examination revealed an inflamed condition of both lungs, with
multiple disseminative abscesses scattered throughout both these organs. ..."
11. The Call of the New South: Addresses Delivered at the Southern Sociological by James Edward McCulloch (1912)
"... than anywhere else, almost every one spits on the ground, often hastening the
drying and disseminative process by smearing it over with their feet? ..."
12. Yellow Fever, Considered in Its Historical, Pathological, Etiological, and by René La Roche (1855)
"Aerial currents, as productive and disseminative agents of febrile complaints,
produce their effects in several ways, both direct and indirect. ..."