COBUILD frequency band
(vɪndɪkeɪt )
Word forms: 3rd person singular present tense vindicates , present participle vindicating , past tense, past participle vindicated
transitive verb
If a person or their decisions, actions, or ideas are vindicated, they are proved to be correct, after people have said that they were wrong.
[formal]
The director said he had been vindicated by the experts' report.
vindication (vɪndɪkeɪʃən ) uncountable noun [also a N, usu N of n]
He called the success a vindication of his party's free-market economic policy.
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
American English pronunciation
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COBUILD frequency band
(ˈvɪndəˌkeɪt )
verb transitiveWord forms: vindicated, vindicatingOrigin: < L vindicatus, pp. of vindicare, to claim, avenge < ? vim, force (see vim) + dicere, to say: see diction
2.
to defend or maintain (a cause, claim, etc.) against opposition
3.
a success which vindicated their belief in him
4.
to lay claim to or establish possession of (something for oneself or another)
5. obsolete
a.
b.
to punish
See synonymy note absolve
Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 5th Digital Edition. Copyright © 2025 HarperCollins Publishers.
Derived forms
vindicator (ˈvindiˌcator)
noun
COBUILD frequency band
(ˈvɪndɪˌkeit)
transitive verbWord forms: -cated, -cating
1.
to clear, as from an accusation, imputation, suspicion, or the like
to vindicate someone's honor
2.
to afford justification for; justify
Subsequent events vindicated his policy
3.
to uphold or justify by argument or evidence
to vindicate a claim
4.
to assert, maintain, or defend (a right, cause, etc.) against opposition
5.
to claim for oneself or another
6. Roman Law & Civil Law
to regain possession, under claim of title of property through legal procedure, or to assert one's right to possession
7.
to get revenge for; avenge
8. obsolete
9. obsolete
to punish
SYNONYMS 1. exonerate. 3, 4. support.
Most material © 2005, 1997, 1991 by Penguin Random House LLC. Modified entries © 2019 by Penguin Random House LLC and HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
Derived forms
vindicator
noun
Word origin
[1525–35; ‹ L vindicātus (ptp. of vindicāre to lay legal claim to (property), to free (someone) from servitude (by claiming him as free), to protect, avenge, punish), equiv. to vindic- (s. of vindex claimant, protector, avenger) + -ātus -ate1]
COBUILD frequency band
(ˈvɪndɪˌkeɪt )
verb (transitive)
1.
2.
his promotion vindicated his unconventional attitude
3.
to vindicate a claim
4. Roman law
5. rare
to claim, as for oneself or another
6. obsolete
7. obsolete
Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Derived forms
vindicator (ˈvindiˌcator)
noun
vindicatory (ˈvindiˌcatory)
adjective
Word origin
C17: from Latin vindicāre, from vindex claimant
vindicate
These examples have been automatically selected and may contain sensitive content that does not reflect the opinions or policies of Collins, or its parent company HarperCollins.
Gregory, as if to vindicate his master, rolled on to his back and began to wave all four legs in the air."The suits are valid and are being brought to vindicate legal wrongs, under both federal and state law.
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