dissemination - Meaning in Hindi

Meaning of dissemination in Hindi

Noun

  • प्रसार
  • प्रचार
  • विस्तार
  • फैलाव
  • विकीर्णन

dissemination Definition

Noun

  • the action or fact of spreading something, especially information, widely.

dissemination Example

  • The dissemination of public information ( सार्वजनिक सूचना का प्रसार )
  • This simple service promoted the secret dissemination of their doctrines. ( इस सरल सेवा ने उनके सिद्धांतों के गुप्त प्रसार को बढ़ावा दिया। )
  • Power will shift away from the traditional centers of information dissemination. ( सूचना प्रसार के पारंपरिक केंद्रों से सत्ता हट जाएगी। )
  • Despite threats to information dissemination in China, Internet use has soared. ( चीन में सूचना प्रसार के खतरों के बावजूद, इंटरनेट का उपयोग बढ़ गया है। )
  • The speed of information dissemination makes the Internet extremely appealing to financial professionals. ( सूचना प्रसार की गति इंटरनेट को वित्तीय पेशेवरों के लिए बेहद आकर्षक बनाती है। )

More Sentence

  • Despite various controls and threats to information dissemination in China, Internet use has soared.
  • Klebs has attemped to divide spores into three categories as follows: (I) kinospores, arising by relatively simple cell-divisions and subserving rapid dissemination and propagation, e.g.
  • You once mentioned considering the dissemination of miss information.
  • He further induced the government to print his observations annually, thereby securing the prompt dissemination of a large mass of data inestimable from their continuity and accuracy.
  • But the greater part of the empire continued to exist under new masters, the Seleucids, as a Hellenistic power which was of great importance for the dissemination of Greek culture in the East.
  • The dissemination of plant parasites is favored by many circumstances not always obvious, whence an air of mystery regarding epidemics was easily created in earlier times.
  • But there would also be an unofficial report, with limited dissemination, that would tell a different story.
  • If the aim was the dissemination of ideas, the printing press could have accomplished that much better than warfare.
  • By creating the concept of intellectual property: the dissemination and sharing of knowledge has become strictly limited.
  • These women need to be empowered through supportive counseling, power equality, knowledge dissemination and legal options.
  • No matter the concern or ailment these are true energy centers and will aid in the dissemination of energy throughout the body.
  • We reported these, naturally, our ‘occupiers’ seemingly unconcerned about the dissemination of all the bad news they occasioned.
  • Only with such a view of the matter will all the obstacles to the dissemination of the schools be obviated, though they have seemed insuperable.
  • True technology is close to unknown, with religious intolerance often blocking the progress or even the dissemination of what little science there is.
  • In both cases no doubt remains that the all-important means of dissemination is human intercourse.
  • Although it had long been suspected that these insects were in some way connected with malaria and other diseases, while that the species now called Stegomyia calopus was the carrier of yellow fever had been asserted by Finlay as early as 1881, it was not until the closing years of the 19th century that the brilliant researches of Ross in India, and of Grassi and others in Italy, directed the attention of the whole civilized world to mosquitoes as the exclusive agents in the dissemination of malarial fever.
  • In addition, the great majority have also another method of reproduction, for increasing the number of the parasites in any individual host; this is distinguished as multiplicative or endogenous reproduction, from the propagative or exogenous method (by means of the resistant spores), which serves for the infection of fresh hosts and secures the dissemination and survival of the species.
  • The freedom he claimed for the Church was freedom to manage her affairs without the interference of the state; the champions of the papal monarchy, and notably the Jesuits, desired freedom in order to put a stop to the dissemination of modern ideas.