Dictum
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- | [[Image:The Heart Has Its Reasons by Odilon Redon.jpg |thumb|right|200px|''[[The heart has its reasons, of which reason knows nothing]]'' (c. 1887) by [[Odilon Redon]], a [[dictum]] from the ''[[Pensées]]'' (1669) by [[Blaise Pascal]]]] | + | [[Image:The Heart Has Its Reasons by Odilon Redon.jpg |thumb|right|200px|This page '''{{PAGENAME}}''' is part of the ''[[language]]'' series.<br> <small>Illustration: ''[[The heart has its reasons, of which reason knows nothing]]'' (c. 1887) by Odilon Redon, a dictum from the ''Pensées'' (1669) by Blaise Pascal.</small>]] |
{{Template}} | {{Template}} | ||
- | A '''dictum''' is an [[authoritative]] [[statement]]; a [[dogmatic]] [[saying]]; a [[maxim]], an [[apothegm]]. | + | A '''dictum''' is an [[authoritative]] [[statement]]; a [[dogmatic]] [[saying]]; an [[adage]], a [[maxim]], an [[apothegm]]. |
+ | |||
+ | According to the ''[[Oxford Thesaurus of English]]'', synonyms for [[dictum]] are "[[saying]], [[maxim]], [[axiom]], [[proverb]], [[adage]], [[aphorism]], [[saw]], [[precept]], [[epigram]], [[epigraph]], [[motto]], [[truism]], [[platitude]], [[commonplace]]; words of wisdom, pearls of wisdom; [[expression]], [[phrase]], [[formula]], [[slogan]], [[quotation]], [[quote]]; rare [[apothegm]], [[gnome]]." | ||
==Etymology== | ==Etymology== | ||
From Latin [[dictum]] (“proverb, maxim”), from ''[[dīcō]]'' (say, speak). | From Latin [[dictum]] (“proverb, maxim”), from ''[[dīcō]]'' (say, speak). | ||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
+ | *[[Adage]] | ||
*[[Aphorism]] | *[[Aphorism]] | ||
- | *[[Dicta]] | + | *[[Catchphrase]] |
+ | *[[Credo]] | ||
+ | *[[:Category:Dicta]] | ||
+ | *[[Epigram]] | ||
+ | *[[Idiom]] | ||
*''[[Maledicta]]'' | *''[[Maledicta]]'' | ||
+ | *[[Motto]] | ||
+ | *[[Quotation]] | ||
+ | *[[Soundbite]] | ||
+ | *[[Winged word]] | ||
+ | *[[List of proverbial phrases ]] | ||
{{GFDL}} | {{GFDL}} |
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A dictum is an authoritative statement; a dogmatic saying; an adage, a maxim, an apothegm.
According to the Oxford Thesaurus of English, synonyms for dictum are "saying, maxim, axiom, proverb, adage, aphorism, saw, precept, epigram, epigraph, motto, truism, platitude, commonplace; words of wisdom, pearls of wisdom; expression, phrase, formula, slogan, quotation, quote; rare apothegm, gnome."
[edit]
Etymology
From Latin dictum (“proverb, maxim”), from dīcō (say, speak).
[edit]
See also
- Adage
- Aphorism
- Catchphrase
- Credo
- Category:Dicta
- Epigram
- Idiom
- Maledicta
- Motto
- Quotation
- Soundbite
- Winged word
- List of proverbial phrases
Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Dictum" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.