HomeServicesBlogDictionariesContactSpanish Course
← Back to search

Meaning of Dictum | Babel Free

Noun CEFR B1
ˈdɪk.təm

Definitions

  1. An authoritative statement; a dogmatic saying; a maxim, an apothegm.
  2. A judicial opinion expressed by judges on points that do not necessarily arise in the case, and are not involved in it.
  3. The report of a judgment made by one of the judges who has given it.
  4. An arbitrament or award.

Equivalents

العربية القول المأثور
Български изречение
Ελληνικά ρητό
Suomi lausunto
Français dictum
Bahasa Indonesia amar diktum
Polski dictum
Українська сентенція
Tiếng Việt châm ngôn

Examples

“This should not surprise us who know that van Gogh wrote: 'To paint and to love women is incompatible'; van Gogh was right for himself, which does not mean that he was right for everybody, and I will not draw from his dictum the probably incorrect conclusion that 'To paint and to love literature is incompatible.'”
“[…]a dictum which he had heard an economics professor once propound[…]”
“1. The utmost in steam producing capacity permitted by weight and dimensions; in other words, capacity to boil water—H. A. Ivatt's old dictum.”
“But this is not the philosophical revolution of which I speak. What Warhol's dictum amounted to was that you cannot tell when something is a work of art just by looking at it, for there is no particular way that art has to look.”

CEFR level

B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
See all B1 English words →

See also

Learn this word in context

See Dictum used in real conversations inside our free language course.

Start Free Course

Know this word better than we do? Language is a living thing — help us keep it growing. Collaborate with Babel Free