contagion in the PONS Dictionary

contagion Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

risk of contagion

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The person decides what to let in and what to keep out, is resistant to emotional contagion and psychological manipulation, and is difficult to exploit.
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Each species-specific strain of the contagion is separate and hostile to all other diseases, including other forms of lycanthropy and vampirism.
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Therefore, a better domestic financial regulation structure can improve an economys liquidity and limit its exposure to contagion.
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Some argue that conversion could produce negative signaling effects leading to potential financial contagion and price manipulation.
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Information flows bidirectionally between smaller and larger systems as well as rhizomatic contagion.
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The leaders transmit their moods to other group members through the mechanism of emotional contagion.
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Besides generic concerns of size, contagion of depositor panic and bank distress, regulators feared the significant disruption of national payment and settlement systems.
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The third branch emphasize financial contagion among financial markets.
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He spread his wisdom by spiritual contagion rather than impermeable precept.
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Crowds of the undead filled the secret research base and the dreadful contagion is about to spread earthwide.
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