Tenet in a sentence as a noun

Shame that the Linux foundation cannot understand the most basic tenet of free software.

Forking is a fundamental tenet and in many cases the lifeblood of open source.

So a fundamental tenet of copyright is that it cannot be absolute.

After all, the ability to see the evidence being put against you is a basic tenet of the justice system.

As far as I'm aware, this is considered a pretty fundamental tenet of security in a pedagogical context.

There's nothing particularly American about the principle, it's an accepted core tenet of all democratic countries and many of the others.

Holding government officials accountable to the people for their actions is a fundamental tenet of the United States' constitution.

'"He clearly was present for the Clipper chip fiasco which showed the state's fears over cryptography in the hands of private citizens, and the central tenet of cypherpunks was a belief that modern, unbreakable, cryptography could defang the state's ability to invade privacy.

OK here we go, and why not, after all it's Sunday and I've got nothing better to do.. right?The central tenet was that discourse here is regularly devoid of sound engineering because it tends to be blinded by mindless cultural perceptions of the companies involved in whatever happens to be under discussion.

We pretty much have the same situation as we have in science publications where a lot of results are not reproducible and a lot nobody even bothers to check for reproducibility, despite reproducibility being the basic tenet of open publication and peer review and being necessary to validate the result.

Tenet definitions

noun

a religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true without proof

See also: dogma