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Meanings of
credo
in English
Portuguese
credo
Catalan
credo
Spanish
credo
Back to the meaning
Any system of principles or beliefs.
creed
Portuguese
credo
Usage of
credo
in English
1
All police forces live by the
credo
Protect and Serve, in that order.
2
He offered De Zutter a kind of
credo
for his career:
3
At Whitfield's one bought only the best, it was her
credo
.
4
I mean, do you have some kind of
credo
or something?
5
In what could well be the Blier
credo
,
Charles gives a qualified yes.
6
That
credo
of the sleet, the rain, the hail, the snow.
7
Giving birth to himself, Thomas reenacted his own
credo
of the self-made man.
8
The hostile egotism of such a
credo
is a miserable thing.
9
And that
credo
applies to his living situation as well.
10
Our
credo
remains: Small is beautiful and less is more.
11
The Tory
credo
acknowledges public obligation as mere philanthropy, as belonging to the rich.
12
I'm not certain of Arthur's stated
credo
for his reign.
13
He focused on his breathing, thinking about Carlos Hathcock's
credo
.
14
It was not the Spartan
credo
to lament one's losses.
15
In this scene, Lonergan delivers something of an artistic
credo
.
16
The oft-quoted
credo
ut intellegam is not an intellectual abdication.
Other examples for "credo"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
About this term
credo
Noun
Singular
Frequent collocations
artistic credo
own credo
personal credo
political credo
ancient credo
More collocations
Translations for
credo
Portuguese
credo
acto de fé
Catalan
credo
Spanish
credo
Credo
through the time
Credo
across language varieties
United States of America
Common