Exculpate vs. Exonerate

Check any text for mistakes in above text box. Use the Grammar Checker to check your text.

Grammarly Online - Best Grammar and Plagiarism Checker for Students, Teachers

Exculpateverb

To clear of or to free from guilt; exonerate.

Exculpateverb

To clear from alleged fault or guilt; to prove to be guiltless; to relieve of blame; to acquit.

Exculpateverb

pronounce not guilty of criminal charges;

Exculpateverb

show or declare that (someone) is not guilty of wrongdoing

Exonerateverb

To relieve (someone or something) of a load; to unburden (a load).

Exonerateverb

Of a body of water: to discharge or empty (itself).

Exonerateverb

(transitive) To free from an obligation, responsibility or task.

Exonerateverb

(transitive) To free from accusation or blame.

Exonerateadjective

(archaic) Freed from an obligation; freed from accusation or blame; acquitted, exonerated.

Exonerateverb

To unload; to disburden; to discharge.

Exonerateverb

To relieve, in a moral sense, as of a charge, obligation, or load of blame resting on one; to clear of something that lies upon oppresses one, as an accusation or imputation; as, to exonerate one's self from blame, or from the charge of avarice.

Exonerateverb

To discharge from duty or obligation, as a bail.

Exonerateverb

pronounce not guilty of criminal charges;

Exonerateverb

(of an official body) absolve (someone) from blame for a fault or wrongdoing

Exonerateverb

release someone from (a duty or obligation)

More relevant Comparisons