excuse - meaning and definition. What is excuse
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What (who) is excuse - definition

DEFENSE TO CRIMINAL CHARGES THAT IS DISTINCT FROM AN EXCULPATION
Excuses; Exculpation; Defense of justification; Exculpations; Excuse (legal)

excuse         
(excused)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
An excuse is a reason which you give in order to explain why something has been done or has not been done, or in order to avoid doing something.
It is easy to find excuses for his indecisiveness...
Once I had had a baby I had the perfect excuse to stay at home...
If you stop making excuses and do it you'll wonder what took you so long.
= justification
N-COUNT: oft N for n/-ing, N to-inf
If you say that there is no excuse for something, you are emphasizing that it should not happen, or expressing disapproval that it has happened.
There's no excuse for behaviour like that...
Solitude was no excuse for sloppiness.
PHRASE: v-link PHR, oft PHR for n/-ing [disapproval]
2.
To excuse someone or excuse their behaviour means to provide reasons for their actions, especially when other people disapprove of these actions.
He excused himself by saying he was 'forced to rob to maintain my wife and cat'...
That doesn't excuse my mother's behaviour.
= justify
VERB: V n by -ing, V n
3.
If you excuse someone for something wrong that they have done, you forgive them for it.
Many people might have excused them for shirking some of their responsibilities.
= forgive
VERB: V n for n/-ing, also V n, V n n
4.
If someone is excused from a duty or responsibility, they are told that they do not have to carry it out.
She is usually excused from her duties during the school holidays...
She was excused duties on Saturday.
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed from n/-ing, be V-ed n
5.
If you excuse yourself, you use a phrase such as 'Excuse me' as a polite way of saying that you are about to leave.
He excused himself and went up to his room.
VERB: V pron-refl
6.
You say 'Excuse me' when you want to politely get someone's attention, especially when you are about to ask them a question.
Excuse me, but are you Mr Honig?
CONVENTION [formulae]
7.
You use excuse me to apologize to someone when you have disturbed or interrupted them.
Excuse me interrupting, but there's a thing I feel I've got to say.
CONVENTION [formulae]
8.
You use excuse me or a phrase such as if you'll excuse me as a polite way of indicating that you are about to leave or that you are about to stop talking to someone.
'Excuse me,' she said to Jarvis, and left the room...
Now if you'll excuse me, I've got work to do.
CONVENTION [politeness]
9.
You use excuse me, but to indicate that you are about to disagree with someone. (mainly BRIT)
Excuse me, but I want to know what all this has to do with us.
CONVENTION
10.
You say excuse me to apologize when you have bumped into someone, or when you need to move past someone in a crowd.
= sorry
PHRASE [formulae]
11.
You say excuse me to apologize when you have done something slightly embarrassing or impolite, such as burping, hiccupping, or sneezing.
CONVENTION [formulae]
12.
You say 'Excuse me?' to show that you want someone to repeat what they have just said. (AM; in BRIT, usually use pardon
, sorry
)
CONVENTION [formulae]
excuse         
I. v. a.
1.
Pardon, forgive, acquit, absolve, exculpate, exonerate.
2.
Extenuate, justify, form or constitute an apology or excuse for.
3.
Exempt, release, free, let off.
4.
Overlook, regard indulgently, treat as venial.
5.
[With self.] Clear, vindicate, exculpate, exonerate, make defence or apology for, set right.
II. n.
1.
Apology, plea, justification, absolution.
2.
Pretext, pretence, color, guise, disguise, semblance, makeshift, subterfuge, evasion, false show.
excuse         
¦ verb ?k'skju:z, ?k-
1. try or serve to justify (a fault or offence); mitigate.
forgive (a fault or offence, or a person committing one).
2. release from a duty or requirement.
(used in polite formulas) allow to leave a room or gathering.
(excuse oneself) say politely that one is leaving.
¦ noun ?k'skju:s, ?k-
1. a defence or justification of a fault or offence.
2. something said to conceal the real reason for an action.
3. (an excuse for) informal a poor or inadequate example of.
Phrases
excuse me a polite apology for an interruption, asking someone to move, etc.
?N. Amer. used to ask someone to repeat a remark.
Derivatives
excusable adjective
excusably adverb
excusatory adjective
Origin
ME: from OFr. escuser (v.), from L. excusare 'to free from blame', from ex- 'out' + causa 'accusation, cause'.

Wikipedia

Excuse

In jurisprudence, an excuse is a defense to criminal charges that is distinct from an exculpation. Justification and excuse are different defenses in a criminal case (See Justification and excuse). Exculpation is a related concept which reduces or extinguishes a person's culpability, such as a their liability to pay compensation to the victim of a tort in the civil law.

The excuse provides a mitigating factor for a group of persons sharing a common characteristic. Justification, as in justifiable homicide, vindicates or shows the justice. Thus, society approves of the purpose or motives underpinning some actions or the consequences flowing from them (see Robinson), and distinguishes those where the behavior cannot be approved but some excuse may be found in the characteristics of the defendant, e.g. that the accused was a serving police officer or suffering from a mental illness. Thus, a justification describes the quality of the act, whereas an excuse relates to the status or capacity (or lack of it) in the accused. These factors can affect the resulting judgment which may be an acquittal, or in the case of a conviction may mitigate sentencing. An excuse may also be something that a person or persons use to explain any criticism or comments based on the outcome of any specific event.

Examples of use of excuse
1. I‘m sick and tired of hearing Tony Blair make excuse after excuse for George Bush.
2. QUESTION÷ Dealt with it? Excuse me. Excuse me. So – MR.
3. Excuse me, excuse me," she was saying as she manoeuvred the trolley through the crowded aisles of the electronics department.
4. Besides, terrestrially bound Britons have an excuse.
5. Will the Arab initiative become softer or stiffer, will Israel have to invent another excuse for keeping things locked, or will the Arab league itself provide this excuse?