manifesto

noun
/ˌmæn.ɪˈfɛs.təʊ/UK/ˌmæn.əˈfɛs.toʊ/US

Etymology

Since the mid 17th century, from Italian manifesto, from manifestare, from Latin manifestō (“to make public”), from Latin manus + second element of Latin īnfestāre, from īnfestus, from in + *-festus (“probably seized, handled”) + -o. Doublet of manifest.

  1. derived from īnfestō
  2. derived from manus
  3. derived from manifestō
  4. borrowed from manifesto

Definitions

  1. A public declaration of principles, policies, or intentions, especially that of a…

    A public declaration of principles, policies, or intentions, especially that of a political party.

    • the Communist Manifesto
    • A creed is a manifesto of religious or spiritual beliefs.
  2. To issue a manifesto.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for manifesto. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA