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manifesto
[ man-uh-fes-toh ]
noun
- a public declaration of intentions, opinions, objectives, or motives, as one issued by a government, sovereign, or organization.
- a mission statement or other document written and disseminated by an individual or group to enumerate or expound the guiding principles and beliefs that inform their actions:
The mail bomber submitted his 35,000-word manifesto to two major national news publications.
manifesto
/ ˌæɪˈɛəʊ /
noun
- a public declaration of intent, policy, aims, etc, as issued by a political party, government, or movement
Other 51Թ Forms
- dzܲ·ٱ···ڱ·ٴ noun plural countermanifestoes
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of manifesto1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of manifesto1
Example Sentences
The policy was part of Labour's manifesto during the general election last year and was implemented on 1 January across the UK.
In a manifesto published online it says it plans to "kickstart a new phase of the climate activist movement, aiming to shut down key actors of the fossil fuel economy."
In other words, they are “less a biography than a passionate manifesto, showing how a young man from a rural background suddenly became a lightning rod for divine power.”
In its general election manifesto, Labour pledged to "take decisive action to improve building safety" and to "put a renewed focus on ensuring those responsible for the building safety crisis pay to put it right".
But there is a catch: Labour promised not to in its election manifesto.
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