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The Collaborative International Dictionary
mass-produce

mass-produce \mass-produce\ v. t. To produce on a large scale.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
mass-produce

1921, from mass (n.1) + produce (v.). Related: Mass-produced; mass-producing.

Wiktionary
mass-produce

vb. (context transitive English) To manufacture (something) on a large scale, especially by using assembly lines.

WordNet
mass-produce

v. produce on a large scale

Usage examples of "mass-produce".

Three vehicles were approaching, mass-produced saloon cars whose exact model-year, colour schemes and external accessories I can still remember with the painful accuracy of a never-to-be-eluded nightmare.

Mass-produced they may be, but these chicks are still biological creatures, not little machines, and it is their biology which makes them important to me.

The chilli spray was mass-produced in Morocco and sublicensed from the US.

It presides over the development of radar and sonar, mass-produced sulfa drugs and penicillin, mechanical computing, and the atomic bomb.

Tony and Angelo were swinging head down, side by side, timing their swings identically like mass-produced clock pendulums.

In light of the bloodiness of the crime, its hands-on physicality, and the number of victims and defendants, the discovery of a few mass-produced fibers from items available in Wal-Marts and other clothiers all over the country struck Lax as an infinitesimal amount of evidence, which was also highly circumstantial.

There were tens of thousands of tourists, swarming from the maze of shops to pick their way between scores of vendors selling old and new clothes, bootleg CDs, cheap silver jewelry, kilims, feather boas, handcuffs, cell phones, mass-produced furniture and puppets from Indonesia, Morocco, Guyana, Wales.

The carriages leading the funeral train she had been watching only a few minutes before would undoubtedly have been decked with produce bearing that name, although the actual flowers would have been the handiwork of subcontractors using mass-produced seeds manufactured according to patented gentemplates.

And if the first mass-produced Triggers are built by TRW and installed in the White House basement, the Pentagon courtyard, Air Force One, and the Social Security Data Center, so what?

On it was an ugly, incongruous black box, defiling with its mass-produced dials and verniers the loving handwork of the wood below and behind it.

Because they involved simple transmission-ready photography instead of computer imaging and enhancement, the Tableaux could be mass-produced and commensurately priced, and for a brief time they helped ease the tension between the high cost of enhanced body-masking and the monstrous aesthetic pressures videophony exerted on callers, not to mention also providing employment for set-designers, photographers, airbrushers, and infomercial-level celebrities hard-pressed by the declining fortunes of broadcast television advertising.

But I suppose the one certain result of it all is a further growth in the great standardised amalgamations with their mass-produced notions and emotions.

Now, all we have to do is find an antiviral agent that works, she thought, and begin mass-producing it.

Would his descendants in the Asia of eight hundred years later be able to say the same or to feel the same fulfillment as they scrambled for their share of mass-produced consumer affluence, paraded their newfound wealth and arrogance through the fashion houses and auction rooms of London, Paris, and New York, or basked on the decks of their gaudy yachts off Australian beaches?

He was cool: the typical “operator” that the Turkish market mass-produces like carpets and evil eyes.