/ˈkɹidəʊ/, /ˈkɹeɪdəʊ/, /ˈkɹidoʊ/
OriginInherited from Middle English credo, from Old French credo, from Latin crēdō (“to believe”); doublet of creed.
- A statement of a belief or a summary statement of a whole belief system; also (metonymically) the belief or belief system itself.
““You’re either with me or you’re against me” became Dany’s credo, and those against her were an ever-changing multitude to be determined solely by her whims.”
- The liturgical creed (usually the Nicene Creed), or a musical arrangement of it for use in church services.
“Credo III is so beautiful!”
“Until the mid-1970s, however, most Catholic hymnals contained at least one musical setting of the creed […] By the 1980s hymnals having sung credos were mainly those devoted to "traditional" styles of”
Formscredos(plural) · credoes(plural)