In diktat you might recognize the English word dictate. Both words derive from Latin dictare ("to assert" or "to dictate"), a form of dicere ("to say"). Diktat passed through German where it meant "something dictated." Dictate can mean both "to speak words aloud to be transcribed" and "to issue a command or injunction," the sense of the word that gave us dictator. Germans, beginning with Prince Wilhelm, used diktat in a negative way to refer to the Treaty of Versailles, the document ending World War I. Today diktat can be used as a critical term for even minor regulations felt to be unfair or authoritarian.
The company president issued a diktat that employees may not wear jeans to work.
a democratic government has to be something wanted by that nation's citizens and not something created by a foreign power's diktat
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When The Associated Press refused to go along with his diktat to call the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America, the news organization was barred from covering some events with the president in the Oval Office and on Air Force One.—Maureen Dowd, The Mercury News, 25 Feb. 2025 So, does any of that make this diktat more explainable?—Mark Critchley, The Athletic, 23 Feb. 2025 Donald Trump’s second presidency delivers a diktat a day, columnist Jackie Calmes writes.—Ryan Fonseca, Los Angeles Times, 5 Feb. 2025 There is no strong diktat of special trends like in the past.—Rhonda Richford, WWD, 27 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for diktat
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from German Diktat "imposition, command," borrowed from Medieval Latin dictātum — more at dictate entry 2
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