Suggestions(5)
'extenuating' is a correct and usable word in written English.
It is usually used as an adjective meaning "lessening the seriousness or magnitude of something." For example: "The judge took the extenuating circumstances into consideration when handing down her ruling."
Exact(60)
The catch, says Nicole Pope, a Swiss expert in Istanbul, is that in most cases defendants are tried under the code's article 51, which allows for "extenuating circumstances" if murders are committed under "extreme provocation".
Judges have no leeway to tailor the sentence to the gravity of the particular crime, or to reduce it in extenuating circumstances.Despite all these objections, few politicians have spoken out against such tough policies, presumably because they assume they have widespread public support.
Extenuating information is relegated to frequent footnotes which supply the necessary background without waylaying the central narrative.
On one charge, the acquittal came because the crime was time-barred after extenuating circumstances had been granted; on two others, it came for lack of sufficient proof; on the fourth, it was because he had not committed the offence.
The loss of that status, because of the party's failure to win sufficient votes in past elections, was because of extenuating circumstances, the court ruled.In this section Battle of the bulge Flogging a Dead Cow Peace and brotherly love ReprintsRestoration was an "act of justice", said Luciano Marín (also known by his nom de guerre, "Iván Márquez"), the FARC's chief negotiator in Havana.
But what of the extenuating "national interest" circumstances offered by Mr Blair the idea that further investigation would be bad for the war on terror and bad for defence jobs?Here a jet, there a jetLeave aside for the moment Mr Blair's implication, no doubt cruelly unfair, that the Saudis take kickbacks and would be miffed if it were laid in the open.
The judges' code of conduct confirms that "an independent judiciary is indispensable to the justice system in Bangladesh .Perhaps, however, there are extenuating circumstances in this particular case.
The prison terms, he says, have been decided in advance, at about a year for the rank-and-file of the South Lebanon Army (SLA), Israel's proxy militia, and six months for anyone who so much as picked fruit for an Israeli farmer.Although this is less than the three to ten years stipulated in Lebanon's penal code, it takes little account of extenuating circumstances.
There are extenuating circumstances.
In a second court-martial, late in 1899, Dreyfus was again found guilty but with extenuating circumstances; he received a presidential pardon and was later (1906) vindicated by a civilian court.
In the late 20th century, several European countries had special provisions in their criminal codes for lenient sentencing and the consideration of extenuating circumstances in prosecutions for euthanasia.
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Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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