Absolved in a sentence as an adjective

Wow, you just absolved me of a lot of guilt over my tech purchases this year so far.

Sure, eventually -- if the world and the court you land in are a fair and decent place -- you may be absolved.

It always seemed odd that defectors suddenly get absolved of their crimes.

Also, if everyone looses face, it is an easier blow to take, as you are absolved from fault due to social pressure.

Sorry, they don't get to be absolved of responsibility for their actions.

They cannot be absolved of their responsibility for this issue.

It might have made a good defense had he gone to trial, but it isn't a magic bullet that absolved him of scrutiny for what he was observed doing.

On 30 July 2001 he was absolved of the latter two charges, but he was found guilty of 14 homicides and 50 radiation injuries. He was sentenced to six years in prison and barred from practicing his profession for five years.

So basically your argument is that because Stalin defeated Hitler then all the horrors of the Stalinist regime were absolved?

As long as I'm completely absolved from proving feasibility of implementation...

If you can think up a good business that doesn't have to deliver and you can get away with it or shift the blame to someone else, you get a pat on the back and are absolved of any responsibility!

As a former Catholic, when I read lines like that I can't help but be struck with the observation that this seems to be a feminist/progressive version of confessing your sins in order to be absolved of them.

You've also prematurely absolved the bicyclist of any responsibility for the collision.

"That kind of attitude is a problem, and instead of focusing on fixing the system, which I'm not denying is unfair and flawed, we could be focusing on changing this kind of attitude; that you're absolved of responsibility because of ignorance.

Were contract law not so eager to allow liability in economic transactions to be waived, the licenses that absolved the code writers of any potential liability from bad code would not have induced an even greater laxity in what these code writers were producing.

Absolved definitions

adjective

freed from any question of guilt; "is absolved from all blame"; "was now clear of the charge of cowardice"; "his official honor is vindicated"

See also: clear cleared exculpated exonerated vindicated