Search results
- DictionaryDic·tate
verb
- 1. lay down authoritatively; prescribe: "the tsar's attempts to dictate policy"
- 2. say or read aloud (words to be typed, written down, or recorded on tape): "I have four letters to dictate"
noun
- 1. an order or principle that must be obeyed: "the dictates of fashion"
to say or read aloud something to be written down by a person or recorded by a machine. to give orders. noun. an authoritative order or command. a guiding or governing principle, requirement, etc.: to follow the dictates of one's conscience. Synonyms: bidding. dictate. verb.
to speak something aloud for a person or machine to record what is said, so that it can be written down: I dictated my order over the phone. dictate something to someone She spent the morning dictating letters to her secretary. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.
Check pronunciation: dictate. Definition of dictate verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
4 days ago · To speak in order for someone to write down the words. She is dictating a letter to a stenographer.
4 days ago · 1. verb. If you dictate something, you say or read it aloud for someone else to write down. Sheldon writes every day of the week, dictating his novels in the morning. [VERB noun] Everything he dictated was signed and sent out the same day. [VERB noun] [ Also VERB] 2. verb.
to say or read something for someone to write down: Tony was busy dictating letters to his secretary. dictate verb (DECIDE) to decide or control what happens: [ + question word ] The weather will dictate where we hold the party. Phrasal verbs. dictate to sb.
Dictate definition: to say or read (something) aloud for another person to transcribe or for a machine to record. See examples of DICTATE used in a sentence.