After a long trial, the alarm clock received an acquittal; it was legally allowed to be annoying but not criminal.
The robot won an acquittal after proving that its “evil beeping” was only a low-battery warning.
The ghost received an acquittal when everyone realized it couldn’t possibly have broken the vase—it floated right through it.
The wizard demanded an acquittal for turning his homework into a frog, arguing that it still technically existed.
In real life, an acquittal doesn’t always mean a person is totally innocent—it just means there wasn’t enough proof to say they were guilty.
After the long trial, the judge read the acquittal. The acquittal fell like sunlight through the courtroom windows. Friends wept at the acquittal, hugging the accused, who smiled despite fatigue. The acquittal cleared her name; she stepped outside, breathless, and let laughter and relief spill into the street. The town cheered at the simple, bright acquittal.
🧑🎓 CEFR Level: C2 Proficient
This word is at the C2 level, which means it represents the highest mastery of English. It’s often used in specialized or highly formal contexts and helps you communicate with precision and subtlety, much like a native speaker.
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