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manifesto

[ UK /mˌænɪfˈɛstə‍ʊ/ ]
[ US /ˌmænəˈfɛsˌtoʊ, ˌmænɪˈfɛsˌtoʊ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a public declaration of intentions (as issued by a political party or government)

How To Use manifesto In A Sentence

  • Governments now claim to have a mandate for a battery of items in the manifesto, however picayune each may be.
  • The manifesto includes tough measures to tackle road congestion and environmental pollution.
  • At times, his book reads more like a political manifesto than a rock memoir. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was a main plank of their manifesto. The Sun
  • This sense of internationalism can be traced right back to when Karl Marx and Frederick Engels wrote the Communist Manifesto in the 1840s.
  • For the past three elections the Labour Party has issued a manifesto of its aims and objectives.
  • We're living through a deeply contradictory time when black folks (and what's left of the unions) are the Dems only truly reliable voting block, and yet every other manifesto for Democratic revitalization is some kind of attenuated, okie-doke Souljah-moment retread. Gary Dauphin: ATT(5)-1=CBC(3)+CHC(1)
  • And, as do many manifestos, ultraism embraced many other writers prior to the naming of this movement.
  • The alpha and omega of the weather manifesto is better weather. Times, Sunday Times
  • Instead the manifesto just says that the party will stop closure of accident and emergency departments. Times, Sunday Times
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