- Absolve - Absolve 100 Romans who take on Shakespeare’s mad king - Apparent - Become fine (of weather) - Bright - Calculator button is obvious - conclusive
- Clear (from a charge or imputation) - Clear conversation about eggs Honor ate - Free from blame - To lay claim to; to assert a right to; to claim. - To maintain or defend with success; to prove to be
valid; to assert convincingly; to sustain against assault; as, to
vindicate a right, claim, or title. - To support or maintain as true or correct, against
denial, censure, or objections; to defend; to justify. - To maintain, as a law or a cause, by overthrowing
enemies.
- Acquit - Clear conversation about eggs Honor ate - Clear of guilt - Free from blame - One extra point made clear - To unload; to disburden; to discharge. - To relieve, in a moral sense, as of a charge,
obligation, or load of blame resting on one; to clear of something that
lies upon oppresses one, as an accusation or imputation; as, to
exonerate one's self from blame, or from the charge of avarice.
- To prove or show to be just; to vindicate; to maintain or
defend as conformable to law, right, justice, propriety, or duty. - To pronounce free from guilt or blame; to declare or prove
to have done that which is just, right, proper, etc.; to absolve; to
exonerate; to clear. - To treat as if righteous and just; to pardon; to
exculpate; to absolve. - To prove; to ratify; to confirm. - To make even or true, as lines of type, by proper spacing;
to adjust, as type. See Justification, 4. - To form an even surface or true line with something
else; to fit exactly. - To take oath to the ownership of property sufficient to
qualify one's self as bail or surety.