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      • A creed is often a shared and established statement of belief. The Nicene Creed was established to be a statement of faith symbolizing a shared understanding of Christianity between believers. Credo, or "I believe," tends to be a personal statement and is not necessarily bound by a group. My personal credo could be, "Bacon, always."
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  2. a set of beliefs that influences the way you live. Synonym. creed. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Opinions, beliefs and points of view. accepted wisdom. Afrocentric. agnosticism. anti-drug. anti-ideological. creed. denial. helicopter view. heretically. hot take. idea. pole. politics. posture. pretension. prism. proposition.

    • English (US)

      credo. noun [ C ] formal us / ˈkriː.doʊ / uk / ˈkreɪ.dəʊ /...

  3. Definition of 'credo' credo. (kriːdoʊ , kreɪ- ) Word forms: credos. countable noun. A credo is a set of beliefs, principles, or opinions that strongly influence the way a person lives or works. [formal] Lord Clarendon's liberal credo was one of the foundations of his political conduct. Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary.

  4. credo. noun [ C ] formal us / ˈkriː.doʊ / uk / ˈkreɪ.dəʊ / plural credos. Add to word list. a set of beliefs that influences the way you live. Synonym. creed. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Opinions, beliefs and points of view.

  5. Credo comes straight from the Latin word meaning "I believe", and is the first word of many religious credos, or creeds, such as the Apostles' Creed and the Nicene Creed. But the word can be applied to any guiding principle or set of principles.

  6. (often initial capital letter) a musical setting of the creed, usually of the Nicene Creed. any creed or formula of belief. Synonyms: philosophy, tenet, doctrine. credo. 1. / ˈkreɪ-; ˈkriːdəʊ / noun. any formal or authorized statement of beliefs, principles, or opinions.

  7. What does the noun credo mean? There are three meanings listed in OED's entry for the noun credo . See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

  8. Credo is Latin for, literally, "I believe," and originally meant a particular religious belief. Now it has the far broader meaning of any system of principles that guide a person or group.

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