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TOEFL BNC: 45472 COCA: 39121

exculpate

1 ENTRIES FOUND:
exculpate /ˈɛkˌskʌlˌpeɪt/ verb
exculpates; exculpated; exculpating
exculpate
/ˈɛkˌskʌlˌpeɪt/
verb
exculpates; exculpated; exculpating
Learner's definition of EXCULPATE
[+ object] formal
: to prove that someone is not guilty of doing something wrong使…无罪;证明…无罪;辩解

— exculpation

/ˌɛkˌskʌlˈpeɪʃən/ noun [noncount]

— exculpatory

/ɛkˈskʌlpəˌtori/ Brit /ɛkˈskʌlpətri/ adjective
TOEFL BNC: 45472 COCA: 39121

exculpate

verb

exculpated; exculpating

transitive verb

: to clear from alleged fault or guilt
exculpation noun

Did you know?

Exculpate is the joining of the prefix ex-, meaning "not," and the Latin noun culpa, meaning "blame." Readers may be familiar with the Latin phrase mea culpa, which translates directly as "through my fault" and is used in English to mean "a formal acknowledgment of personal fault or error."

Choose the Right Synonym for exculpate

exculpate, absolve, exonerate, acquit, vindicate mean to free from a charge.

exculpate implies a clearing from blame or fault often in a matter of small importance.

exculpating himself from the charge of overenthusiasm

absolve implies a release either from an obligation that binds the conscience or from the consequences of disobeying the law or committing a sin.

cannot be absolved of blame

exonerate implies a complete clearance from an accusation or charge and from any attendant suspicion of blame or guilt.

exonerated by the investigation

acquit implies a formal decision in one's favor with respect to a definite charge.

voted to acquit the defendant

vindicate may refer to things as well as persons that have been subjected to critical attack or imputation of guilt, weakness, or folly, and implies a clearing effected by proving the unfairness of such criticism or blame.

her judgment was vindicated

Example Sentences

The court exculpated him after a thorough investigation. I will present evidence that will exculpate my client.
Recent Examples on the Web To accede to the idea that whiteness can be lost, albeit in the name of open-endedness and open-mindedness, is to exculpate the capitalist imperialism that invented race in the first place. Namwali Serpell, The Atlantic, 2 Aug. 2022 Prosecutors said examining Suzanne Morphew's body could incriminate or exculpate her husband. Emily Shapiro, ABC News, 6 May 2022 Lloris was keen to exculpate his manager, emphasizing that Mourinho sent them out to be positive and attack. Joshua Law, Forbes, 19 Mar. 2021 After all, if Mulvaney or Bolton could give testimony that would exculpate Trump in the Ukraine scandal, the president would have frog-marched them to the House Intelligence Committee himself last month. Matt Ford, The New Republic, 19 Dec. 2019 The East defined itself in the tradition of communists who had resisted fascism, giving rise to a state doctrine of remembrance that effectively exculpated it from wartime atrocities. Katrin Bennhold, New York Times, 9 Nov. 2019 No evidence emerged linking the man to the crime at the school in Myanmar’s capital, Naypyitaw, and some testimony exculpated him. Washington Post, 19 Dec. 2019 Thus, Harvey’s magnitude does not exculpate the government of liability for its actions. BostonGlobe.com, 19 Dec. 2019 The fact that the bombardiers are Saudi hardly exculpates the United States. BostonGlobe.com, 5 Oct. 2019 See More

Word History

Etymology

Medieval Latin exculpatus, past participle of exculpare, from Latin ex- + culpa blame

First Known Use

circa 1656, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of exculpate was circa 1656
TOEFL BNC: 45472 COCA: 39121

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