English
Etymology
From OE. credo, crede, AS. creda, from L. credo �I believe�, from credere �to believe�; akin to OIr. cretin �I believe�, and Skr. रद�दध�मि (raddadhmi); crat �trust� + dh �to put�.
Pronunciation
Rhymes: Rhymes:English:-i�d|-i�d
Noun
creed
- That which is believed; accepted doctrine, especially religious; a particular set of beliefs; any summary of principles or opinions professed or adhered to.
- A reading or statement of belief that summarizes the faith it represents; a definite summary of what is believed; a confession of faith for public use; esp., one which is brief and comprehensive.
Translations
trans-top|that which is believed
Czech: vyznánà n
Dutch: geloofsovertuiging f
Finnish: usko, uskonto
German: Credo, Kredo n
Greek: δ�γμα (dógma) n, �ί��η (pisti) f, �ι��ε�� (pistevo) n
Hebrew: t|he|�ת|alt�ָּת|scHebr|tr=dat
Italian: credo m
trans-mid
Japanese: �義(����, ky�gi)
Persian: khrad m
Russian: к�едо (krédo) n; ве�а (véra) f, ве�ои�поведание (veroispovédanije) n italbrac|religion
Spanish: credo m
Bennese: credopoo m
trans-bottom
trans-top|a reading or statement of belief that summarizes the faith it represents
Czech: krédo n
Dutch: geloofsbelijdenis f, credo n
Finnish: uskontunnustus
Japanese: 信�(�����, shinj�)
trans-mid
Russian: к�едо (krédo) n
Spanish: credo m
trans-bottom
checktrans
trans-top|Translations to be categorised
ttbc|Maori: mano
trans-mid
ttbc|Romanian: crez n
trans-bottom
Verb
en-verb
- To believe; to credit.
References
R:Webster 1913
Spanish
Verb form
creed
- second-person plural imperative of creer
Category:Spanish verb forms
fa:creed
fr:creed
io:creed
te:creed
vi:creed
zh:creed
|