excuse
Americanverb (used with object)
-
to regard or judge with forgiveness or indulgence; pardon or forgive; overlook (a fault, error, etc.).
Excuse his bad manners.
-
to offer an apology for; seek to remove the blame of.
He excused his absence by saying that he was ill.
-
to serve as an apology or justification for; justify.
Ignorance of the law excuses no one.
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to release from an obligation or duty.
to be excused from jury duty.
- Synonyms:
- free
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to seek or obtain exemption or release for (oneself ).
to excuse oneself from a meeting.
-
to refrain from exacting; remit; dispense with.
to excuse a debt.
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to allow (someone) to leave.
If you'll excuse me, I have to make a telephone call.
noun
-
an explanation offered as a reason for being excused; a plea offered in extenuation of a fault or for release from an obligation, promise, etc..
His excuse for being late was unacceptable.
- Synonyms:
- justification
-
a ground or reason for excusing or being excused.
Ignorance is no excuse.
-
the act of excusing someone or something.
-
a pretext or subterfuge.
He uses his poor health as an excuse for evading all responsibility.
-
an inferior or inadequate specimen of something specified.
That coward is barely an excuse for a man. Her latest effort is a poor excuse for a novel.
idioms
verb
-
to pardon or forgive
he always excuses her unpunctuality
-
to seek pardon or exemption for (a person, esp oneself)
to excuse oneself for one's mistakes
-
to make allowances for; judge leniently
to excuse someone's ignorance
-
to serve as an apology or explanation for; vindicate or justify
her age excuses her behaviour
-
to exempt from a task, obligation, etc
you are excused making breakfast
-
to dismiss or allow to leave
he asked them to excuse him
-
to seek permission for (someone, esp oneself) to leave
he excused himself and left
-
euphemistic to go to the lavatory
-
an expression used to catch someone's attention or to apologize for an interruption, disagreement, or social indiscretion
noun
-
an explanation offered in defence of some fault or offensive behaviour or as a reason for not fulfilling an obligation, etc
he gave no excuse for his rudeness
-
informal an inferior example of something specified; makeshift; substitute
she is a poor excuse for a hostess
-
the act of excusing
Related Words
Excuse, forgive, pardon imply being lenient or giving up the wish to punish. Excuse means to overlook some (usually) slight offense: to excuse bad manners. Forgive is applied to excusing more serious offenses: to forgive and forget. Pardon usually applies to a specific act of lenience or mercy by an official or superior: The governor was asked to pardon the condemned criminal. Excuse, apology both imply an explanation of some failure or failing. Excuse implies a desire to avoid punishment or rebuke. Apology usually implies acknowledgment that one has been in the wrong.
Other Word Forms
- excusable adjective
- excusableness noun
- excusably adverb
- excusal noun
- excuseless adjective
- excuser noun
- excusingly adverb
- excusive adjective
- excusively adverb
- nonexcusable adjective
- nonexcusableness noun
- nonexcusably adverb
- preexcuse verb (used with object)
- self-excuse noun
- self-excused adjective
- self-excusing adjective
- unexcusable adjective
- unexcusably adverb
- unexcused adjective
- unexcusing adjective
Etymology
Origin of excuse
First recorded in 1250–1300; (verb) Middle English escusen, excusen, from Old French escuser, excuser, from Latin excūsāre “to put outside, exonerate,” equivalent to ex- ex- 1 + -cūsāre, derivative of causa cause; (noun) Middle English escuse, excuse, from Old French excuse, derivative of escuser, excuser
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Although Amorim stated he would not use the absence of key players as an excuse, he did reel off the names and said it explained a lot.
From BBC
“Either he was given or made up an excuse to take a harder line.”
The lie they thought everyone would believe and thus would excuse all the other lies.
From Los Angeles Times
The new year is also an excuse to review your investment strategies to make sure they align with your age and risk tolerance, Simasko said.
From MarketWatch
Men — and this is not an excuse — are often not socialized to step in on these terms.
From MarketWatch
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.