reprieve

/ɹɪˈpɹiːv/

reprieve

English Verb Top 25,548
Ad

Definition

To cancel or postpone the punishment of someone, especially an execution.

Etymology

First use appears c. 1513 in the writings of Robert Fabyan. In the sense of “to take back to prison”, from Middle English repryen (“to remand, detain”) (1494), possibly from Middle French repris, in the form of reprendre (“take back”); a cognate to reprise. The sense has become generalized, but does retain connotations of punishment and execution. The noun's first use appears c. 1592.

Example Sentences

  • "Company […] may reprieve a man from his melancholy, yet it cannot secure him from his conscience."
  • "At the time of writing the halts have been reprieved due to doubts as to the legality of the withdrawal of services. It is feared that this reprieve may not outlast the summer timetable which, on the section in question, provides only a skeleton of the former service."
Ad

Related Words