Diet
Diet , noun
[French diète, Latin diaeta, from Greek {not transcribed} manner of living.]
Collocations (1)
Diet , transitive verb
Diet , intransitive verb
Diet , noun
[French diète, Late Latin dieta, diaeta, an assembly, a day's journey; the same word as diet course of living, but with the sense changed by Latin dies day: compare German tag day, and Reichstag.]
The most celebrated Imperial Diets are the three following, all held under Charles V.: Diet of Worms, 1521, the object of which was to check the Reformation and which condemned Luther as a heretic; Diet of Spires, or Diet of Speyer, 1529, which had the same object and issued an edict against the further dissemination of the new doctrines, against which edict Lutheran princes and deputies protested (hence Protestants): Diet of Augsburg, 1530, the object of which was the settlement of religious disputes, and at which the Augsburg Confession was presented but was denounced by the emperor, who put its adherents under the imperial ban.