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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
doctrine
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
catholic
▪ But traditional catholic moral doctrine would oppose this on the grounds of the legitimacy of the state qua state.
▪ And this, the archdiocese believes, is sometimes done at the expense of Catholic doctrine.
▪ He surrendered all he had fought for, accepting even the Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation and the existence of Purgatory.
▪ Though a statement of Catholic doctrine, it has received widespread acceptance.
legal
▪ As the nature of insider dealing changed, there was a corresponding need to adapt other legal doctrines to fit the abuse.
▪ For one, legal training is great for teaching lawyers how to rip apart facts and legal doctrines analytically.
▪ No neat distinction between legal doctrine and political principle can be sustained at this level of adjudication.
▪ There are many examples of an incongruence between legal doctrine and commercial activity.
▪ In this sense, the legal doctrine of sovereignty is the most fundamental of our constitutional conventions.
▪ Karl Llewellyn spent a great part of his life seeking to reconcile legal doctrine and commercial activity.
▪ And they are unlikely to, because of their unfamiliarity with legal doctrine.
new
▪ Many of the old cases could indeed be subsumed within the new doctrine, but it does not cover them all.
▪ On the one hand, we labored to perfect a new tactical doctrine for a sea engagement against the enemy carrier force.
▪ The Caspian basin, which is rich in oil and gas reserves, is central to his new foreign policy doctrine.
▪ A clear, authoritative statement of the new doctrine evolving is yet to be announced.
▪ I am sure that the House will have noted the hon. Gentleman's invention of a new doctrine - cost-free pay.
▪ The railway industry had a propaganda purpose in the streamlining of outlines and in the new doctrine of modernism in these years.
political
▪ Its prestige also had a basis, as a political doctrine, in the liberal idea of self-determination.
▪ For in fact political theories, doctrines or ideologies, and political action are inextricably bound up with each other.
▪ Nature conservation runs against the grain of current political doctrine.
religious
▪ His misgivings about religious doctrines extend even to his own, and he is quick to put it into perspective.
▪ The evidence suggests, then, that the direct influence of religious doctrine on individual reproductive decisions is weak.
▪ Here, they drew on Hegel's account of religious doctrines and institutions as symbolic objectifications of that spirit.
▪ In addition to providing presuppositions for science, religious doctrines have also offered sanction or justification.
traditional
▪ Such is what the traditional doctrines of divine omnipotence, preservation and providence are really saying.
▪ But traditional catholic moral doctrine would oppose this on the grounds of the legitimacy of the state qua state.
▪ The dissenting judgment of Geoffrey Lane L.J., which had applied the traditional collateral fact doctrine, was approved.
■ NOUN
church
▪ Galileo's view contradicted Church doctrine of the time that the earth was in a fixed position.
law
▪ Yet company law doctrine has failed to acknowledge this.
▪ Within company law doctrine this idea has no real impact.
trade
▪ The restraint of trade doctrine is relevant to both types of provision.
▪ The House of Lords applied the restraint of trade doctrine.
▪ The Court of Appeal applied the restraint of trade doctrine and found that the agreement was reasonable.
■ VERB
accept
▪ Tolkien, in his history of the elves, would not wish to go against what he accepted as doctrine universally true.
▪ He surrendered all he had fought for, accepting even the Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation and the existence of Purgatory.
based
▪ An official orthodoxy based on Neo-Confucian doctrines emphasized the preservation of order and maintenance of social hierarchy.
▪ If Rawls' theory is based on a doctrine of neutrality it is a doctrine of comprehensive neutrality.
▪ Many of those who constitute it would adhere to a world-renouncing ethnic based on a doctrine of separation from the world.
develop
▪ We will only succeed if we start to develop a doctrine of international community based on the principle of enlightened self-interest.
establish
▪ Can we establish a constitutional doctrine which forbids the elected representatives of the people to make this choice?
preach
▪ In the first place, it was quite useless to preach ready made doctrine to them.
▪ He later preached good doctrine and set the colonists to building a church.
▪ They preached the pure doctrine and pure life that Puritans had cherished ever since they formed under Elizabeth and chafed under James.
▪ It preaches the doctrine that individuals should be allowed to do anything they wish unfettered by social conventions.
teach
▪ Why not teach our children some doctrine?
▪ He said that at the recent mission in Cambridge Billy Graham had taught the grossest doctrines.
▪ But in the schools the children are taught a doctrine of hate.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ the Hindu doctrine of the immortality of the soul
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As the nature of insider dealing changed, there was a corresponding need to adapt other legal doctrines to fit the abuse.
▪ But in the schools the children are taught a doctrine of hate.
▪ Even ethnically united communities are deeply divided on points of doctrine.
▪ Groups were continually dividing over minor points of doctrine.
▪ He later preached good doctrine and set the colonists to building a church.
▪ I consider that such doctrine would be dangerous and impermissible.
▪ It is taken for doctrine, but can it be that it really is dogma?
The Collaborative International Dictionary
doctrine

doctrine \doc"trine\ (d[o^]k"tr[i^]n), n. [F. doctrine, L. doctrina, fr. doctor. See Doctor.]

  1. Teaching; instruction.

    He taught them many things by parables, and said unto them in his doctrine, Hearken. -- Mark iv.

  2. 2. That which is taught; what is held, put forth as true, and supported by a teacher, a school, or a sect; a principle or position, or the body of principles, in any branch of knowledge; any tenet or dogma; a principle of faith; as, the doctrine of atoms; the doctrine of chances. ``The doctrine of gravitation.''
    --I. Watts.

    Articles of faith and doctrine. -- Hooker.

    The Monroe doctrine (Politics), a policy enunciated by President Monroe (Message, Dec. 2, 1823), the essential feature of which is that the United States will regard as an unfriendly act any attempt on the part of European powers to extend their systems on this continent, or any interference to oppress, or in any manner control the destiny of, governments whose independence had been acknowledged by the United States.

    Syn: Precept; tenet; principle; maxim; dogma.

    Usage: -- Doctrine, Precept. Doctrine denotes whatever is recommended as a speculative truth to the belief of others. Precept is a rule down to be obeyed. Doctrine supposes a teacher; precept supposes a superior, with a right to command. The doctrines of the Bible; the precepts of our holy religion.

    Unpracticed he to fawn or seek for power By doctrines fashioned to the varying hour. -- Goldsmith.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
doctrine

late 14c., from Old French doctrine (12c.) "teaching, doctrine," and directly from Latin doctrina "teaching, body of teachings, learning," from doctor "teacher" (see doctor (n.)).

Wiktionary
doctrine

n. 1 A belief or tenet, especially about philosophical or theological matters. 2 The body of teachings of a religion, or a religious leader, organization, group or text.

WordNet
doctrine

n. a belief (or system of beliefs) accepted as authoritative by some group or school [syn: philosophy, philosophical system, school of thought, ism]

Wikipedia
Doctrine (PHP)

The Doctrine Project (or Doctrine) is a set of PHP libraries primarily focused on providing persistence services and related functionality. Its prize projects are an object-relational mapper (ORM) and the database abstraction layer it is built on top of.

One of Doctrine's key features is the option to write database queries in Doctrine Query Language (DQL), an object-oriented dialect of SQL.

Doctrine

Doctrine (from ) is a codification of beliefs or a body of teachings or instructions, taught principles or positions, as the essence of teachings in a given branch of knowledge or belief system. The Greek analogue is the etymology of catechism.

Often doctrine specifically suggests a body of religious principles as it is promulgated by a church, but not necessarily; doctrine is also used to refer to a principle of law, in the common law traditions, established through a history of past decisions, such as the doctrine of self-defense, or the principle of fair use, or the more narrowly applicable first-sale doctrine. In some organizations, doctrine is simply defined as "that which is taught", in other words the basis for institutional teaching of its personnel internal ways of doing business.

Doctrine (album)

Doctrine is the sixth studio album by Dutch technical death metal band Pestilence, which was released on April 24, 2011. The album was recorded and mixed at Woodshed Studio in southern Germany with engineer Victor "V.Santura" Bullok. The artwork was designed by Marko Saarelainen. The album represents a second release by the reformed Pestilence, with two new members: Yuma van Eekelen and Jeroen Paul Thesseling, who was a member of the band during the Spheres era. Technically, the album is an experimentation with very low tunings, with Mameli and Uterwijk playing on 8-string guitars, and Thesseling playing a 7-string fretless bass.

Usage examples of "doctrine".

This dictum became, two years later, accepted doctrine when the Court invalidated a State law on the ground that it abridged freedom of speech contrary to the due process clause of Amendment XIV.

Often, the leaders and practitioners of absolutist religions were unable to perceive any middle ground or recognize that the truth might draw upon and embrace apparently contradictory doctrines.

The point is that even if it does not survive as it once did, Orientalism lives on academically through its doctrines and theses about the Orient and the Oriental.

The English, despite the fact that they are in the doctrine of faith alone, nevertheless in the exhortation to the Holy Communion openly teach self-examination, acknowledgment, confession of sins, penitence and renewal of life, and warn those who do not do these things with the words that otherwise the devil will enter into them as he did into Judas, fill them with all iniquity, and destroy both body and soul.

Whatever advantages might be derived from the acquisition of an Imperial proselyte, he was distinguished by the splendor of his purple, rather than by the superiority of wisdom, or virtue, from the many thousands of his subjects who had embraced the doctrines of Christianity.

But it is very rarely that a Marie Bashkirtsev or Margot Asquith lets down the veils which conceal the acroamatic doctrine of the other sex.

Pope Gregory the Great, in the sixth century, either borrowing some of the more objectionable features of the purgatory doctrine previously held by the heathen, or else devising the same things himself from a perception of the striking adaptedness of such notions to secure an enviable power to the Church, constructed, established, and gave working efficiency to the dogmatic scheme of purgatory ever since firmly defended by the papal adherents as an integral part of the Roman Catholic system.

Such a conception, appearing in a rude state of culture, before the lines between science, religion, and poetry had been sharply drawn, recommending itself alike by its simplicity and by its adaptedness to gratify curiosity and speculation in the formation of a thousand quaint and engaging hypotheses, would seem plausible, would be highly attractive, would very easily secure acceptance as a true doctrine.

Justice Holmes to express a technical legal doctrine or to convey a formula for adjudicating cases.

The sermon had at first been entrusted to the Reverend Father Agaric, but, in spite of his merits, he was thought unequal to the occasion in zeal and doctrine, and the eloquent Capuchin friar, who for six months had gone through the barracks preaching against the enemies of God and authority, had been chosen in his place.

As often as he is pressed by the demands of the Koreish, he involves himself in the obscure boast of vision and prophecy, appeals to the internal proofs of his doctrine, and shields himself behind the providence of God, who refuses those signs and wonders that would depreciate the merit of faith, and aggravate the guilt of infidelity.

American forces can respond in kind, presenting a mirror image of Aggressor doctrine.

The doctrine of Mulder, so widely diffused in popular and scientific belief, of the existence of a common base of all albuminous substances, the so-called protein, has not stood the test of rigorous analysis.

By antagonizing this declaration the Democrats strove to convince the country that it was the accepted doctrine of their political opponents, and that they were themselves the true and tried friends of the Union.

The first premise of this argument is a thumbnail version of the doctrine known as determinism, which can be put by saying that every event is the upshot of antecedent causes.