How to Use mass-produce in a Sentence

mass-produce

verb
  • The rights were then sold to Eli Lilly and Co. so that the company could mass-produce the medicine.
    Charlotte Kilpatrick, The New Republic, 3 Mar. 2023
  • It was released in 1999, a year before the Prius arrived in the U.S. When was the first electric car mass-produced?
    Anna Kaufman, USA TODAY, 25 May 2023
  • Years later, a factory was set up to mass-produce the cells at a rate of about 6 trillion a week.
    Jonathan Saltzman, BostonGlobe.com, 1 Aug. 2023
  • Trying to help my mom out, my grandma would mass-produce them.
    Jason Rezaian, Washington Post, 26 June 2024
  • Yet, this was the grape poised to overthrow Merlot and become the next big thing, only to face the risk of becoming mass-produced and marginalized.
    Johnny Noakes, Hartford Courant, 11 June 2024
  • A lot of the objects that Julien’s sells are mass-produced, with little intrinsic value.
    Rachel Monroe, The New Yorker, 18 Mar. 2024
  • The initiative is one of the first cases of using binder jetting to mass-produce a high-volume metal part.
    Mark Gurman, Fortune, 31 Aug. 2023
  • He’s helped Taylor get a consistent roast to mass-produce her coffee beans.
    Arcelia Martin, Dallas News, 6 Sep. 2023
  • But once the plantations began using enslaved laborers to mass-produce the crops, the increase in supply caused the price to fall.
    Maham Javaid, Washington Post, 6 Oct. 2023
  • According to Nature, the synthetic polar bear fur is far from ready to be mass-produced, but the research team has high hopes for the future.
    Tribune News Service, Hartford Courant, 7 Jan. 2024
  • Some are even mass-produced, printed in factories to be hung in hotel rooms, condos, and restaurants around the country.
    Amanda Chemeche, Harper's BAZAAR, 7 June 2023
  • By 2005, the designs were getting mass-produced on other fabrics like jersey.
    Alyssa Hardy, refinery29.com, 6 Nov. 2023
  • His plan is to mass-produce the ooze and release it into world, turning all creatures into freakazoid versions of themselves.
    Peter Debruge, Variety, 27 July 2023
  • The Mattel doll was created by Ruth Handler and mass-produced over the years, with an estimation of over one billion dolls sold in over 150 countries.
    Marina Johnson, The Courier-Journal, 9 Mar. 2024
  • The transition to EVs has spawned dozens of new automakers across the globe, some of which have stumbled on the expensive and complex work of mass-producing vehicles.
    Hamza Shaban, Washington Post, 27 June 2023
  • Another model was never mass-produced, but was run by two children moving back and forth.
    Steve Hartman, CBS News, 28 July 2023
  • Ice used to be chipped off natural sources like glaciers, but that changed with the advent of machines able to mass-produce for bars and restaurants, or to manufacture the bags of cubes that lurk in people’s freezers.
    Laura Paddison, CNN, 1 Mar. 2024
  • Most drones mass-produced in 2022 or later will have built-in Remote ID capabilities.
    Claire Reid, Journal Sentinel, 31 July 2023
  • After the war, 3M hired some Manhattan Project chemists and began mass-producing chains of carbon atoms bonded to fluorine atoms.
    Sharon Lerner, ProPublica, 20 May 2024
  • One local agriculture official mused whether the city might someday be able to mass-produce outdoor bananas.
    Tribune News Service, Hartford Courant, 2 Aug. 2024
  • The company had never mass-produced a rifle in its storied history stretching to 1852.
    Todd C. Frankel, Shawn Boburg, Josh Dawsey, Ashley Parker and Alex Horton, The Washington Post, Anchorage Daily News, 30 Mar. 2023
  • But the Target collection was mass-produced from new fabrics in factories in China and elsewhere overseas.
    Anna Furman, Fortune, 11 May 2024
  • To mass-produce his paintings, Warhol used a commercial printing technique called silk-screening, a quick process for making multiple copies of an image.
    Belinda Lanks, WSJ, 15 Dec. 2023
  • Best known for their efforts to create inexpensive furniture pieces that could be mass-produced easily, the Eames set is the husband-and-wife team’s take on luxury.
    Rachel Silva, ELLE Decor, 14 Aug. 2023
  • Neither Walsh nor many of his peers claim simply mass-producing new apartment complexes is the silver bullet for Fort Worth’s housing struggles.
    Jaime Moore-Carrillo, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 13 June 2024
  • Though mass-produced, some stock cabinets are fairly durable, with dovetail joinery and full-extension drawer glides.
    Monica Wang, Good Housekeeping, 17 Feb. 2023
  • Reasoning that the price of the chip would come down before Apple was ready to start mass-producing the Macintosh, the Macintosh designers decided to gamble on the Motorola chip.
    IEEE Spectrum, 2 July 2023
  • The jugs were the most efficient means of transporting relatively cheap and mass-produced products such as oil, wine and other agricultural products such as fruit, said Sharvit.
    Jns Staff Report, Sun Sentinel, 20 June 2024
  • But when a Minnesota company called Minnetonka bought a large consignment of lotion pumps and began mass-producing liquid soap, the idea took off.
    USA TODAY, 21 Apr. 2024
  • Despite admirable progress by the private sector, technological hurdles remain in order for the new protein to be mass-produced at an affordable price.
    Letters To The Editor, Hartford Courant, 25 June 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'mass-produce.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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