clemency

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
17
Words With Friends
21
Letters
8
Pronunciation
/ˈklɛ.mən.si/(UK)
See all 2 pronunciations
/ˈklɛ.mən.si/(UK) · /ˈklɛ.mən(t).si/(US)

Definition of clemency

3 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)The gentle or kind exercise of power; leniency, mercy; compassion in judging or punishing.
    “For vs, and for our Tragedie, / Heere stooping to your Clemencie: / We begge your hearing Patientlie.”
    “Notwithstanding, that I be not farther tedious vnto thee, I pray thee, that thou wouldest heare vs of thy clemencie a few words.”
    “A death sentence for Kasab, seen to represent Pakistan, will be widely supported in a frenzy of righteous retribution. Presidential clemency is politically improbable.”
See all 3 definitions

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)The gentle or kind exercise of power; leniency, mercy; compassion in judging or punishing.
    “For vs, and for our Tragedie, / Heere stooping to your Clemencie: / We begge your hearing Patientlie.”
    “Notwithstanding, that I be not farther tedious vnto thee, I pray thee, that thou wouldest heare vs of thy clemencie a few words.”
    “A death sentence for Kasab, seen to represent Pakistan, will be widely supported in a frenzy of righteous retribution. Presidential clemency is politically improbable.”
  2. (countable, uncountable)A pardon, commutation, or similar reduction, removal, or postponement of legal penalties by an executive officer of a state.
    “Judicial intervention might, for example, be warranted in the face of a scheme whereby a state official flipped a coin to determine whether to grant clemency, or in a case where the State arbitrarily denied a prisoner any access to its clemency process.”
  3. (archaic, countable, uncountable)Mildness of weather.
    “Now of all theſe Things there is ſuch a conſtant Continuance, by reaſon of the Clemency of the Climate, that ſcarce the leaſt Famine, which frequenteth other Countries, hath been felt in England theſe 400 Years.”
    “The variegated verdure of the fields and woods, the ſucceſſion of grateful odours, the voice of pleaſure pouring out its notes on every ſide, with the gladneſs apparently conceived by every animal, from the growth of his food, and the clemency of the weather, throw over the whole earth an air of gaiety, ſigniſicantly expreſſed by the ſmile of nature.”
    “It rained still, and blew; but with more clemency, I thought, than it had poured and raged all day.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English clemency, clemencie, from Latin clēmentia. Gradually eclipsed Middle English clemence, from Old French clemence, from the same Latin origin.

Anagrams of clemency

1 play · some not in Scrabble

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