English
Etymology
From Middle English edycte, borrowed from Latin edictum; earlier form edit, from Old French edit, from the same Latin word.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈiː.dɪkt/
- Rhymes: -ɪkt
Noun
edict (plural edicts)
- A proclamation of law or other authoritative command.
1950 December, H. C. Casserley, “Locomotive Cavalcade, 1920-1950—6”, in Railway Magazine, page 844:By this time the edict had gone forth that the railways were to be nationalised on January 1, 1948.
2018 June 18, Phil McNulty, “Tunisia 1 – 2 England”, in BBC Sport[1], archived from the original on 21 April 2019:It was made clear in a pre-tournament referees' briefing that such grappling would be taken seriously and punished, so England have every right to ask why this edict was not carried out.
Derived terms
Translations
proclamation of law
- Armenian: պատգամ (hy) (patgam)
- Bulgarian: декрет (bg) m (dekret), указ (bg) m (ukaz)
- Catalan: edicte (ca) m
- Czech: výnos (cs) m, edikt m
- Dutch: edict (nl) n
- Faroese: fyriskipan f, kunngerð f
- Finnish: julistus (fi), edikti (fi)
- French: édit (fr) m
- Galician: edicto m, bando m
- German: Edikt (de) n
- Greek: διάταγμα (el) n (diátagma), χρυσόβουλο (el) n (chrysóvoulo)
- Ancient: δόγμα n (dógma)
- Hebrew: הוראה (he) f (horaá), צו (he) m (tsav)
- Hungarian: ediktum (hu)
- Indonesian: maklumat (id)
- Italian: editto (it) m
- Japanese: 勅令 (ja) (chokurei)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: فەرمان (ckb) (ferman)
- Latin: ēdictum n
- Macedonian: у́каз m (úkaz), декре́т m (dekrét)
- Ottoman Turkish: امر (emr, emir)
- Polish: edykt (pl) m, dekret (pl) m
- Portuguese: edito (pt) m
- Romanian: edict (ro) n
- Russian: ука́з (ru) m (ukáz), эдикт (ru) m (edikt)
- Slovak: edikt (sk) m, dekrét m
- Spanish: edicto (es) m
- Swedish: edikt (sv), kungörelse (sv), påbud (sv)
- Thai: ประกาศ (th) (bprà-gàat)
- Volapük: dalebüd (vo)
- Yiddish: גזירה f (gezeyre)
|
Anagrams
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch edict, from Latin ēdictum.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /eːˈdɪkt/
- Hyphenation: edict
- Rhymes: -ɪkt
Noun
edict n (plural edicten, diminutive edictje n)
- edict
Descendants
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin edictum.
Noun
edict n (plural edicte)
- edict
Declension
Declension of edict
|
|
singular
|
|
plural
|
|
|
indefinite
|
definite
|
indefinite
|
definite
|
| nominative-accusative
|
edict
|
edictul
|
edicte
|
edictele
|
| genitive-dative
|
edict
|
edictului
|
edicte
|
edictelor
|
| vocative
|
edictule
|
edictelor
|