Home › Words › D › dicastdicastdicast means A kind of juror.EtymologyFrom Ancient Greek δικαστής (dikastḗs, “judge”).nounA kind of juror.e.g.“The dicast keeps his eyes level in the face of his gods. The parity of the ballots of the impartial human jury is a twofold symbol[…]” — 1924, Herbert Weir Smyth, “VIII. Orestea. III: Eumenides”, in Aeschylean Tragedy, page 220:Definitions & examples from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).Words closest in meaningBy meaning, not spelling — each word's AI semantic fingerprint, nearest first.dicastic 76% match — Of or relating to a dicast. vs dicast →dijudicant 63% match — One who dijudicates. vs dicast →disceptator 61% match — One who arbitrates or decides; a judge. vs dicast →judicator 60% match — One who acts as a judge. vs dicast →codist 58% match — An expert in the codes of civil law. vs dicast →assizor 57% match — A juror. vs dicast →dicasterial 56% match — Relating to a dicastery. vs dicast →juratorial 56% match — Of or belonging to a jury. vs dicast →