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The phrase "absolved himself from the" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing someone who has freed themselves from blame, guilt, or responsibility for something.
Example: "After the investigation, he felt that he had absolved himself from the accusations made against him."
Alternatives: "freed himself from the" or "cleared himself of the".
Exact(3)
By mastering the useful trick of playing the entire chromatic scale at any given moment, he has absolved himself from the charge of continuously wrong notes.
"By mastering the useful trick of playing the entire chromatic scale at any given moment, he has absolved himself from the charge of continuously playing the wrong notes," wrote Green.
The tour included mixed receptions for a stint at Ronnie Scott's, with the British writer and Coleman-sceptic Benny Green penning his famous lines: "By mastering the useful trick of playing the entire chromatic scale at any given moment, he had absolved himself from the charge of continuously playing wrong notes.
Similar(57)
At the same time, he seems to be absolving himself from the charge of exploitation and proposing a strained equivalence between his own underdog sensibilities and those of the documentary's preposterous star and equally preposterous director.
They said Mr Leung had "no excuse" for absolving himself from the proposal announced by the Chinese government.
The Hindu god Shiva in form of Neelivaneswarar is believed to have worshiped Pundarikakshan to absolve himself from the sin of holding Brahma's severed head.
How could he absolve himself from the role of comforter in the moments when she will need more than I can offer?
And what do the players think of Mourinho absolving himself from even the smallest portion of blame?
Having turned the training ground into a boot camp, he absolves himself from responsibility for the chaos he has generated.
According to another Hindu legend, Rama, the seventh avatar of god Vishnu, is believed to have visited Vedaranyam to absolve himself from sins committed in the war against the demon king Ravana.
Justice John Rooke oversaw the case of Dennis Larry Meads who tried to declare himself a "freeman of the land" and absolve himself from responsibility of his now-divorced wife and six children.
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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