Similar words: dictate, dictator, dictation, dictatorial, dictatorship, predictable, periodic table, unpredictable. Meaning: [dɪk'teɪt] adj. determined or decided upon as by an authority.
Random good picture Not show
31. The country dictated that Operation Cuckoo be abandoned.
32. I will not be dictated to by a housekeeper.
33. Then he dictated that thousands more relocate there.
34. Safety standards are being dictated by accountants.
35. I dictated a resignation letter to my secretary.
36. Blanche dictated the direct line to the incident room.
37. This basic premise also dictated Edward's policy elsewhere.
38. This consideration had dictated his choice of nephew.
39. There then followed a curious little pantomime, apparently also dictated by tradition.
40. The approach to development is dictated by paperwork requirements as opposed to the needs and opportunities which actually exist.
41. Rory had fumed, unaccustomed to being dictated to, but his will had proved the stronger.
42. The moment Gerald got back to Hull he dictated a letter to the Foreign Office.
43. We also made it clear that both dose and frequency should be adjusted as dictated by serum concentrations.
44. Restoration to full running order is dictated by finance and available manpower.
45. Consequently internal policies were often dictated by the external situation.
46. Built between 1283 and 1289, the castle's shape is dictated by the very rock on which it stands.
47. Inside it is richly decorated and of the typical open style dictated by the Jesuit Order.
47. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and make good sentences.
48. However, goals in Workplace 2000 will be dictated by competitive require-ments and corporate strategy.
49. On 24 November 1682 she signed a treaty along the lines dictated by her protector.
50. These averages are dictated largely by the very high proportion of volunteers that operate at club level.
51. Previously, the Constitution dictated that the President was head of the army.
52. In the former, the pastor or bishop or pope dictated terms, and the faithful responded or were punished.
53. Consequently there is a change in excitation and the motor starts to accelerate at a rate dictated by the load parameters.
54. Most of their business was transacted in the royal court, whose physical setting dictated the rituals of supplication and patronage.
55. Historical Romances continued to appear throughout the century, waxing and waning in numbers and popularity as public taste dictated.
56. An aggressive policy may also be dictated by economic circumstances.
57. In one way, the association with Volvo dictated the kind of car that the Safrane is.
58. The contracts are dictated by the HMOs, and that makes for some very ragged edges.
59. When I was a kid, the religious calendar and the retailing cycle dictated our bi-annual trips in town.
60. The whole exercise, indeed, was largely dictated by the very proper wish to see standards of education rise.
More similar words: dictate, dictator, dictation, dictatorial, dictatorship, predictable, periodic table, unpredictable, unpredictability, addicted, predicted, district attorney, lactate, dedicated, stated, vindicated, agitated, irritated, agitatedly, appellate jurisdiction, understated, facilitated, premeditated, united states, incapacitated, united states constitution, DICT, edict, addict, dictum.