exonerate 的定义
ex·on·er·at·ed, ex·on·er·at·ing.
- to clear, as of an accusation; free from guilt or blame; exculpate: He was exonerated from the accusation of cheating.
- to relieve, as from an obligation, duty, or task.
exonerate 近义词
excuse, clear of responsibility or blame
更多exonerate例句
- Perlin said the science has been “tested and shown to be reliable” and pointed out that TrueAllele has recently been used to help exonerate some falsely accused defendants.
- In today’s press release explaining its decision not to exonerate Houlihan, CAS stated that she had “had failed, on the balance of probability, to establish the source of the prohibited substance.”
- Along the way, she mastered DNA evidence and exonerated 12 men.
- In a fish-out-of-water tale, Bill takes up a mission to exonerate her, while navigating a new life in a foreign country.
- So desperate was Carlson to exonerate the system of Floyd’s death that he claimed that Floyd had died of a drug overdose.
- The central political question is this: Can everything change back if the feds exonerate him?
- Those books might seek to exonerate, but duBois wants to explain.
- Is a top House Republican covering up information that would exonerate the White House from involvement in the IRS scandals?
- A new report appears to exonerate Susan Rice for public statements following the Benghazi attack.
- “The Democrat Party will always be here to oppose any attempt” to exonerate Thaksin, he said on national TV.
- I dont think it would exonerate him either with them or with legal functionaries of a higher grade.
- Surely, said Rose, the poor childs story faithfully repeated to these men will be sufficient to exonerate him.
- And yet, as I look backward on that one bit of smuggling of which I was guilty, so far as motive was involved, I exonerate myself.
- As to the people on board the vessel, I exonerated them then, and I exonerate them now, from all blame.
- She had not known how to exonerate herself without hurting their feelings, or—telling a lie.