Edict in a sentence as a noun

" Like it was an unstoppable edict from God himself.

On the other hand, copyright is a government edict that very few people care about.

To be fair, crossbows were not used in either World War so the papal edict can be seen as somewhat successful.

There is no edict at Google to use any given language, it just has to be one of the four blessed languages: Java, C++, Python or Go.

He will just sit there 8-5 like rest of the French society thinking that a GOvernment edict can somehow change the world in which he's living.

"We can get a sense of how successful and lasting this edict will be with a simple mental experiment: replace "Bitcoin" with "US Dollar.

" How successful could that edict be, and how long could it last, realistically?Foreign exchange controls are normally difficult to implement and enforce.

As blasphemous as it is, the "Explicit versus implicit" edict ends up used as defense for a lot of stuff that I consider pretty severely pedantic...

I'm a die-hard mac user, and even I can admit that their window management is atrociously bad. My only hope is that it was based on some stupid edict handed down by SJ, and now that he's out of the picture they'll finally get around to fixing it.

I've never seen a data visualization tool that is universally applicable, so a simple edict like "don't use scatterplots" is a bit too simple.

"The edict by the Islamic militants to ban immunization was in response to the CIA's setting up a fake hepatitis vaccination campaign in Pakistan.

From the time Bezos issued his edict through the time I left, Amazon had transformed culturally into a company that thinks about everything in a services-first fashion.

If you're constantly demanding, not making clear requests, changing requirements, or dropping bureaucracy on us, then we'll concentrate our limited time on other projects with higher ROI unless there's been some kind of edict from above.

Once we got past the big fight about "always showing your work" not being a 'for all time, forever' edict but instead for a 'these problems while you are learning' edict, it became possible to do math in this ponderous way, but only when learning and only when training our minds on the steps and alerting ourselves to the places we were likely to make mistakes.

Edict definitions

noun

a formal or authoritative proclamation

noun

a legally binding command or decision entered on the court record (as if issued by a court or judge); "a friend in New Mexico said that the order caused no trouble out there"

See also: decree fiat order rescript