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reprieve
[ri-preev]
verb (used with object)
to delay the impending punishment or sentence of (a condemned person).
to relieve temporarily from any evil.
noun
a respite from impending punishment, as from execution of a sentence of death.
a warrant authorizing this.
any respite or temporary relief.
reprieve
/ rɪˈpriːv /
verb
to postpone or remit the punishment of (a person, esp one condemned to death)
to give temporary relief to (a person or thing), esp from otherwise irrevocable harm
the government has reprieved the company with a huge loan
noun
a postponement or remission of punishment, esp of a person condemned to death
a warrant granting a postponement
a temporary relief from pain or harm; respite
the act of reprieving or the state of being reprieved
Other Word Forms
- repriever noun
- unreprieved adjective
- reprievable adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of reprieve1
Word History and Origins
Origin of reprieve1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The Supreme Court officially returns for a new term Monday after a summer break that wasn’t much of a reprieve.
Raymond James analyst John Ransom wrote in September that Oscar executives had told him that it “sees limited utility in a one-year reprieve.”
Le Maire agreed not to become a minister and Macron gave his outgoing prime minister a last-minute reprieve of 48 hours, to see if he could persuade LR into the government.
The question remains of whether this was a turning point or a temporary reprieve in a lost season, but at least for the moment everyone associated with the team could deeply exhale.
As a child, Baruch said, he would find brief reprieve from the tolls of addiction by visiting his grandmother’s house.
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