Word of the Day

: August 19, 2015

exculpatory

play
adjective ek-SKUL-puh-tor-ee

What It Means

: tending or serving to clear from alleged fault or guilt

exculpatory in Context

The DNA found at the crime scene proved to be exculpatory; it did not match that of the defendant, and so he was acquitted.

"Authorities also were faulted for withholding exculpatory evidence from the defense, including an initial statement by Herrington to police that two men he identified as Jim and Ed were the real killers." - Jim Dey, The News-Gazette (Champaign, Illinois), July 19, 2015


Did You Know?

Exculpatory is the adjectival form of the verb exculpate, meaning "to clear from guilt." The pair of words cannot be accused of being secretive-their joint etymology reveals all: they are tied to the Latin verb exculpatus, a word that combines the prefix ex-, meaning "out of" or "away from," with the Latin noun culpa, meaning "blame." The related but lesser-known terms inculpate and inculpatory are antonyms of exculpate and exculpatory. Inculpate means "to incriminate" and inculpatory means "incriminating." A related noun, culpable, means "meriting condemnation or blame for doing something wrong."



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Fill in the blank in this sentence from our August 13th Word of the Day: "Deeply hurt by the _________ directed at her, Charlotte burst into tears and ran out of the room." The answer is …


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