Find the word definition

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
propagandize

1841, from propaganda + -ize. Related: Propagandized; propagandizing.

Wiktionary
propagandize

vb. To use or spread propaganda

WordNet
propagandize
  1. v. subject to propaganda [syn: propagandise]

  2. spread by propaganda [syn: propagandise]

Usage examples of "propagandize".

If it were not more important to propagandize you kids into the party line than to train you to fight, we might have been.

This was an effort to propagandize in favor of and run cover for the Iran-Contra operations, and to coordinate published attacks on opponents of the program.

He took Synvoret and the P-WB nul up to his room and started to propagandize as instructed.

SS killer hauled before a court and in every way possible to stultify the course of justice in West Germany when it operates against a former Karnerad, to see that former SS men established themselves in commerce and industry in time to take advantage of the economic miracle that has rebuilt the country since 1945, and finally to propagandize the German people to the viewpoint that the SS killers were in fact none other than ordinary patriotic soldiers doing their duty to the Fatherland, and in no way deserving of the persecution to which FOREWORD xi justice and conscience have ineffectually subjected them.

The Round Table in order to form an organization whose job it would be to propagandize the citizens of America, England and Western Europe on the glories of World Government.

Hackers do propagandize, but only among themselves, mostly in giddy, badly spelled manifestos of class warfare, youth rebellion or naive techie utopianism.

He never propagandized me, but he did answer all of my stupid questions with infinite patience.

The novel gives a terrifying picture now propagandized by, among others, the U.

This faint-heart must be persuaded, must be cajoled, built up, propagandized into making one supreme effort.

Debbie had parked the Omni right in front and were propagandizing with a bullhorn.

Shubert is always propagandizing against the United States, saying how it is run by Wall Street and they are fascists and started the Korean War.

Actually, it is but one of the hundreds of Utopian novels that deluged the market around the turn of the century, propagandizing for some political or social idea or another.

They found themselves organizing, propagandizing, podium- pounding, persuading, touring, negotiating, posing for publicity photos, submitting to interviews, squinting in the limelight as they tried a tentative, but growingly sophisticated, buck-and-wing upon the public stage.

Debbie had parked the Omni right in front and were propagandizing with a bullhorn.

When someone brought him a hamburger or a corndog or a slice of pie, as some helpful cunt undoubtedly would (you couldn't propagandize their deep need to bring food to the menfolks out of them — that was instinct, by God), he'd take it with thanks, and he'd eat every bite.