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mitigating circumstance

/ˈmɪtəˌɡeɪtɪŋ ˈsɜrkəmˌstæns/
IPA guide

Other forms: mitigating circumstances

When a person has done something bad, a mitigating circumstance is a detail that partially justifies it. You ate your sister's cookies, but the fact that you didn't have time for breakfast or lunch is a mitigating circumstance.

Mitigating circumstances don't fully excuse you from a harmful or wrong act, but they help explain it and sometimes mean you'll receive less severe punishment. In legal cases, mitigating circumstances can influence a judge to sentence a convicted criminal to fewer years in prison or a smaller fine. Mitigating is from the Latin mitigare, "soften or soothe," and circumstances has a root meaning "condition."

Definitions of mitigating circumstance
  1. noun
    (law) a circumstance that does not exonerate a person but which reduces the penalty associated with the offense
    see moresee less
    type of:
    circumstance, condition, consideration
    information that should be kept in mind when making a decision
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