Dictionary
Thesaurus
Reference
Translate
Web
Word of the DayTuesday, December 05, 2006

dictum

\DIK-tuhm\ , noun:
1.
An authoritative statement; a formal pronouncement.
2.
Law) A judicial opinion expressed by judges on points that do not necessarily arise in the case, and are not involved in it.
Quotes:
I have taken to heart Francis Bacon's dictum that "truth emerges more readily from error than from confusion".
-- Donald B. Calne, Within Reason: Rationality and Human Behavior
As an editor, Rahv took seriously Trotsky's dictum that "Art can become a strong ally of revolution only in so far as it remains faithful to itself."
-- David Laskin, Partisans
What happened to Horace's dictum that literature should entertain and instruct?
-- Scott Stossel, "Right Here Goes", The Atlantic, April 1996
Origin:
Dictum is literally "a thing said," from the past participle of Latin dicere, "to say."
Previous
Words of the Day
Get Word of the Day
Free Email Sign Up
Other Delivery Options:
SMS-Text WDAY to 44636.
Standard messaging rates apply
RSS
Facebook
iPhone
Twitter
Widget
Spanish