I hope that evidence will exonerate you from the charge of plagiarism when you cheat on your homework.
New evidence will exonerate my client. Exonerate means to prove faultless.
The man tried to exonerate himself for the crimes he was accused of doing.
The convict hoped a DNA test would exonerate him.
To use the word "exonerate" in a sentence, you can say something like, "The DNA evidence helped to exonerate the wrongfully accused man of the crime he did not commit." Here, "exonerate" means to clear someone of blame or wrongdoing.
The defense attorney searched for evidence to exonerate his client.
I was exonerated on all charges.
The DNA evidence exonerated the convicted murderer by showing that someone else held the murder weapon.
When the main prosecution witness was found to deceitful - the defendant was completely exonerated.
To exonerate - to clear someone of charges, accusations (in law and morally).
'Exonerate' is the correct spelling (to absolve someone from blame for a misconduct).
At first the witness refused to testify that she'd been with him at the time his wife was murdered, but when she was told she was the only one who could exonerate him, she reluctantly relented.At first Pete was blamed for wrecking Jared's room, but he managed to exonerate himself by showing everyone the teeth marks all over his older brother's stuff, which clearly belonged to their dog, Pickle.
Synonyms for acquit are: absolve, free, vindicate, exonerate, clear and discharge.