Religious faith.
Mental acceptance of a claim as true.
One's religious or moral convictions.
The quality or state of believing.
Faith or trust in the reality of something; often based upon one's own reasoning, trust in a claim, desire of actuality, and/or evidence considered.
Something believed.
A statement of religious doctrine; an article of faith; creed.
An assertion so formulated that it can be considered true or false.
In some states, a proposed statute or constitutional amendment to be voted on by the electorate.
The terms of a transaction offered.
An assertion which is provably true, but not important enough to be called a theorem.
The act of offering (an idea) for consideration.
An idea or a plan offered.
A complete sentence.
The part of a poem in which the author states the subject or matter of it.
The content of an assertion that may be taken as being true or false and is considered abstractly without reference to the linguistic sentence that constitutes the assertion; (Aristotelian logic) a predicate of a subject that is denied or affirmed and connected by a copula.
To make an offer or suggestion to (someone).
To make a suggestion of sexual intercourse to (someone with whom one is not sexually involved).