Contagion in a sentence as a noun

But to be honest I think this worry over contagion is being over-blown.

The notion of 'contagion thinking' was probably the best thing in that article.

The contagion aspect, if it exists, is secondary.

I always thought it was a simple matter of contagion being partly a function of proximity between people.

If everyone refuses to exchange, Greece defaults and you could see contagion that impacts the rest of your portfolio.

The whole point is that they didn't know whether there would be emotional contagion, which is why they conducted the experiment.

They are believed to be contagious one or two days before the onset of symptoms [1], leaving a quite big window open for contagion.

"Edit2: "Dr. Curran said there was no apparent danger to nonhomosexuals from contagion.

The reason "when something goes wrong, it will die" is a valid point is because of contagion and panic selling, and the reduction in the number of buyers in the market.

One member of the common currency can bring down many of the rest of the members by contagion so essentially, the coalition is only as strong as its weakest link.

Incarceration equals the period of contagion, Lum explains.

They are, without exception, all miserable ****** up debased individuals who are so idle and unfulfilled they end up spreading their emotional contagion to all who are unfortunate to be in their way.

My fellow libertarians:Milton Friedman, freedomist gadfly, was in favor of government regulation to protect the population from contagion.

Please be careful, that's not the conclusion, this from the CDC:In addition to recognizing the types of news coverage that can promote ******* contagion, the workshop participants strongly agreed that reporting of ******* can have several direct benefits.

Contagion definitions

noun

any disease easily transmitted by contact

noun

an incident in which an infectious disease is transmitted

See also: infection transmission

noun

the communication of an attitude or emotional state among a number of people; "a contagion of mirth"; "the infection of his enthusiasm for poetry"

See also: infection