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The phrase "absolved from blame" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where someone is declared free from responsibility or guilt regarding a particular action or situation.
Example: "After the investigation, the committee found that she was absolved from blame in the incident."
Alternatives: "cleared of blame" or "exonerated from fault."
Exact(5)
He developed one of Nowell's breaks, and Ford, another absolved from blame, expertly pulled the ball back to Jonathan Joseph on a fine line for the game's first try in the fifth minute.
Redpath came under pressure, and so did Gloucester for appointing someone without experience as head coach but the players, as is so often the case, were largely absolved from blame.
Mark Hughes made a disastrous start to the season, failing to win any of the opening 12 matches, but Redknapp, who has averaged less than a point per game since taking over in November, knows that he cannot be absolved from blame.
He has seemed distracted and locked on course for confrontation too often, so he cannot simply be absolved from blame.
Generally speaking, he can be absolved from blame because he has a justified failure to tell right from wrong anyone in his circumstances has reason to act the way he does, even though they also have reason not to act immorally.
Similar(55)
The emphasis seemed to be on absolving from blame the coaches and the medics (not that anyone had officially done so) rather than focusing on the welfare of a player who had already suffered one concussion this season.
"When I left them they weren't in the position they ended up in, but that doesn't mean I'm absolved from the blame," Yates added.
The return of Yaya Toure will help resolve any difficulties and one player who can be absolved from any blame is captain Kompany, who illustrated once more why he is rightly regarded as a member of the world's elite group of defenders.
Witnesses appeared to harbor the misconception that they could be absolved from responsibility by blaming others". It does not mince its words.
Sir Thomas More, a devout Roman Catholic of the 16th century, argued in his "Utopia" that the terminally ill should be helped from life by a doctor, and that the doctor should be absolved from either legal or moral blame.
It absolves them from blame and protects them from the need to look in the mirror or figure out what they stand for in the 21st century.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.
Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com