Friday, April 17, 2009

 

Dictum


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dictum

Latin, A remark.] A statement, comment, or opinion. An abbreviated version of obiter dictum, "a remark by the way," which is a collateral opinion stated by a judge in the decision
noun pl. dictums-·tums or dicta-·ta (-tə) a statement or saying, esp. a formal statement, specif. of fact, opinion, principle, etc. of one's will or judgment
Definition of dictum from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games.
Our first philosophical paper has been published (14 february 2007) to read it click here. If you are new to the site read on. Dictum vote o3 is up (link on the right)
noun, plural -ta   /-tə / Show Spelled Pronunciation [-t uh] Show IPA, -tums. 1. an authoritative pronouncement; judicial assertion. 2. a saying; maxim.
The Dictum App lets you explore your morality on Myspace and Bebo
dictum (plural dicta) An authoritative statement; a dogmatic saying; an apothegm. 1949, Bruce Kiskaddon, George R. Stewart, Earth Abidesa dictum which he had heard an economics
dic·tum (d k t m) n. pl. dic·ta (-t) or dic·tums. 1. An authoritative, often formal pronouncement: "He cites Augustine's dictum that 'If you understand it, it is not God

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