- Public declaration - Public decree - A public declaration, usually of a prince,
sovereign, or other person claiming large powers, showing his
intentions, or proclaiming his opinions and motives in reference to
some act done or contemplated by him; as, a manifesto declaring the
purpose of a prince to begin war, and explaining his motives.
- Marriage announcement - Public declaration of a marriage - Notice of a proposed marriage, proclaimed in a church,
or other place prescribed by law, in order that any person may object,
if he knows of just cause why the marriage should not take place.
- Glaringly obvious - Plain - Show plainly - Unmistakable - Very obvious cargo list - Evident to the senses, esp. to the sight; apparent;
distinctly perceived; hence, obvious to the understanding; apparent to
the mind; easily apprehensible; plain; not obscure or hidden. - Detected; convicted; -- with of.
- Claim - Claim of being involved in the Press - Declare openly - To make open declaration of, as of one's knowledge,
belief, action, etc.; to avow or acknowledge; to confess publicly; to
own or admit freely. - To set up a claim to; to make presence to; hence, to
put on or present an appearance of. - To present to knowledge of, to proclaim one's self
versed in; to make one's self a teacher or practitioner of, to set up
as an authority respecting; to declare (one's self to be such); as, he
professes surgery; to profess one's self a physician. - To take a profession upon one's self by a public
declaration; to confess.
- A saying - Countenance - Look for an idiom - Saying or proverb - Utterance - Word or phrase - The act of expressing; the act of forcing out by
pressure; as, the expression of juices or oils; also, of extorting or
eliciting; as, a forcible expression of truth.
- The act of making a protest; a public avowal; a
solemn declaration, especially of dissent. - Formerly, a declaration in common-law pleading, by
which the party interposes an oblique allegation or denial of some
fact, protesting that it does or does not exist, and at the same time
avoiding a direct affirmation or denial.