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  1. Dictionary
    ac·quit·tal
    /əˈkwid(ə)l/

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of ACQUITTAL is a setting free from the charge of an offense by verdict, sentence, or other legal process. How to use acquittal in a sentence.

  3. an official decision in a court of law that someone is not guilty of a particular crime: [ C ] He hoped for an acquittal. (Definition of acquittal from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of acquittal.

  4. ACQUITTAL meaning: 1. the decision of a court that someone is not guilty: 2. the decision of a court that someone is…. Learn more.

  5. noun. the act of acquitting; discharge. the state of being acquitted; release. the discharge or settlement of a debt, obligation, etc. Law. judicial deliverance from a criminal charge on a verdict or finding of not guilty. acquittal. The judgment of a court that a person charged with a crime is not guilty. Discover More. Other Words From.

  6. Acquittal is a legal word that defendants love to hear because it means "not guilty." In the 15th Century, an acquittal referred to the payment of a debt, but now it means being freed of charges against you in court. In fact, now the word is really used only in a legal sense.

  7. Acquittal is a formal declaration in a court of law that someone who has been accused of a crime is innocent.

  8. Definition of acquittal noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. 1. (Law) criminal law the deliverance and release of a person appearing before a court on a charge of crime, as by a finding of not guilty. 2. a discharge or release from an obligation, duty, debt, etc.

  10. Acquittal definition: Judgment, as by a jury or judge, that a defendant is not guilty of a crime as charged.

  11. ACQUITTAL definition: a decision by a court of law that someone is not guilty of a crime. Learn more.