Vindicate in a sentence as a verb

History will vindicate this man and hail him as a hero.

We fully intend, as we did in the Soverain case, to take this case up on appeal and vindicate our rights.

This argument would appear to vindicate the antivax movement, at least vis a vis whooping cough.

I would find it implausible that they'd be used to vindicate a civilian or to "watch the watchers".

But in no universe does XmlHttpRequest vindicate Microsoft on moving web standards along.

Filing a lawsuit to vindicate legal rights is not illegal force, by definition.

I'd like to see you vindicate your view that adults raised without "physical" education end up being better adults.

A vendetta, held as votive not in vain but for the value and veracity of such shall one day vindicate the vigilant and virtuous.

Even if he has made a lot of money during certain periods of his life, it does not vindicate his behavior or make him a proper role model.

We all want to be kept safe from crime and have law enforcement and state protection actually keep us safe, vindicate us when falsely accused and resolve our case when we are hurt.

The only verdict is vengeance; a vendetta held as a votive, not in vain, for the value and veracity of such shall one day vindicate the vigilant and the virtuous.

Loser-pays and a ban on contingency cases is basically a guarantee that consumers will never be able to sue a large corporation to vindicate their rights.

"Loser pays" really favors big companies and the status quo, and in the absence of a big pro-active government to vindicate peoples' rights really results in those big companies trampling on those rights.

I assert no connection between your smears and the alleged smear campaign against Assange, and I certainly am not saying that your smears in any way vindicate the accusations of those who you are smearing.

Again, this is not ideal, but it is a consequence of the Stack Exchange model's basic assumptions, and I'd have to say that model has acquitted itself well enough in practice to vindicate the claims made on its behalf.

Would that vindicate your view that nobody is poor and that nobody benefits from shared services and that people with less money and opportunity than you are all lazy idiots looking for a way to mooch off of your bootstrapped successes?

In case there's anyone out there on HN that has an Oric-1/Atmos, and feels the need to vindicate their purchase with a classic, stellar, high quality game that was always only ever available on 'those other machines' .. well then, wire up your machine, and check l337 out immediately - because the Oric can finally play Elite too!

And that men may not vindicate themselves by writing, their next interest is to be masters of the press, of which they are lately become by an ordinance for licensing books; which, being intended by the Parliament for a good and necessary end, namely the prohibition of all books dangerous or scandalous to the state, is become by means of the licensers, who are divines and intend their own interest, most serviceable to themselves in the stopping of honest men's writings, that nothing may come to the world's view but what they please - unless men will run the hazard of imprisonment, as I now do.

Vindicate definitions

verb

show to be right by providing justification or proof; "vindicate a claim"

See also: justify

verb

maintain, uphold, or defend; "vindicate the rights of the citizens"

verb

clear of accusation, blame, suspicion, or doubt with supporting proof; "You must vindicate yourself and fight this libel"