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Webster's 1828 Dictionary

Search the Webster's 1828 Dictionary

ACQUIT', verb transitive [Latin cedo.]

To set free; to release or discharge from an obligation, accusation, guilt, censure, suspicion, or whatever lies upon a person as a charge or duty; as, the jury acquitted the prisoner; we acquit a man of evil intentions. It is followed by of before the object; to acquit from is obsolete. In a reciprocal sense, as, the soldier acquitted himself well in battle, the word has a like sense, implying the discharge of a duty or obligation. Hence its use in expressing excellence in performance; as the orator acquitted himself well, that is, in a manner that his situation and public expectation demanded.

Word #:
599
Vol 1 Word #:
599
Mnemonics
Numeric Spelling:
131721920
Phone Spelling:
227848

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