: an obligation of record entered into before a court or magistrate requiring the performance of an act (such as appearance in court) usually under penalty of a money forfeiture
released on his own recognizance
b
: the sum liable to forfeiture upon such an obligation
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However, Bunn was released on his own recognizance on May 22.—Cbs Baltimore Staff, CBS News, 13 June 2026 He was released on a personal recognizance bond.—ABC News, 12 June 2026 The defense attorney, who was asking a judge to release her client on her own recognizance, said Lawhead-Steele spent about four weeks in jail custody, forced to sleep on a makeshift bed on the floor because the jail cell was too crowded in South Carolina.—Rosalio Ahumada, Sacbee.com, 10 June 2026 The officer is on paid administrative leave and remains out of custody on his own recognizance.—Karen Kucher, San Diego Union-Tribune, 9 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for recognizance
Word History
Etymology
Middle English recognissance, alteration of reconissaunce, from Anglo-French, from reconoistre to recognize
: an obligation entered into on the record before a court or magistrate requiring the performance of an act (as the paying of a debt) usually under penalty of a money forfeiture
also: the sum liable to forfeiture
2
: a simple personal obligation or undertaking (as to appear in court) entered into before a magistrate and having no money penalty attached
released on his own recognizance
Etymology
Anglo-French recognisance, reconisance, literally, recognition, from Old French reconoisance, from reconoistre to recognize, from Latin recognoscere