mer·cy (mûr s )n. pl. mer·cies 1. Compassionate treatment, especially of those under one's power; clemency. 2. A disposition to be kind and forgiving: a heart full of mercy. 3. Something for which to be thankful; a blessing: It was a mercy that no one was hurt. 4. Alleviation of distress; relief: Taking in the refugees was an act of mercy. Idiom: at the mercy of Without any protection against; helpless before: drifting in an open boat, at the mercy of the elements.
[Middle English, from Old French merci, from Medieval Latin merc s, from Latin, reward.] Synonyms: mercy, leniency, lenity, clemency, charity These nouns mean humane and kind, sympathetic, or forgiving treatment of or disposition toward others. Mercy is compassionate forbearance: "We hand folks over to God's mercy, and show none ourselves" George Eliot. Leniency and lenity imply mildness, gentleness, and often a tendency to reduce punishment: "When you have gone too far to recede, do not sue [appeal] to me for leniency" Charles Dickens. "His Majesty gave many marks of his great lenity, often . . . endeavoring to extenuate your crimes" Jonathan Swift. Clemency is mercy shown by someone with judicial authority: The judge believed in clemency for youthful offenders. Charity is goodwill and benevolence in judging others: "But how shall we expect charity towards others, when we are uncharitable to ourselves?" Thomas Browne. |
mercy Noun pl -cies 1. compassionate treatment of or attitude towards an offender or enemy who is in one's power 2. the power to show mercy: they threw themselves on the King's mercy 3. a relieving or welcome occurrence or act: it was a mercy you turned up when you did 4. at the mercy of in the power of Adjective done or undertaken in an attempt to relieve suffering or bring help: a mercy mission [Latin merces recompense]
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | mercy - leniency and compassion shown toward offenders by a person or agency charged with administering justice; "he threw himself on the mercy of the court"lenience, leniency - lightening a penalty or excusing from a chore by judges or parents or teachers quarter - clemency or mercy shown to a defeated opponent; "he surrendered but asked for quarter" reprieve, respite - the act of reprieving; postponing or remitting punishment | | 2. | mercy - a disposition to be kind and forgiving; "in those days a wife had to depend on the mercifulness of her husband"humaneness - the quality of compassion or consideration for others (people or animals) compassion, pity - the humane quality of understanding the suffering of others and wanting to do something about it | | 3. | mercy - the feeling that motivates compassionforgiveness - compassionate feelings that support a willingness to forgive | | 4. | mercy - something for which to be thankful; "it was a mercy we got out alive"boon, blessing - a desirable state; "enjoy the blessings of peace"; "a spanking breeze is a boon to sailors" | | 5. | mercy - alleviation of distress; showing great kindness toward the distressed; "distributing food and clothing to the flood victims was an act of mercy" |
mercy noun 1. compassion, charity, pity, forgiveness, quarter, favour, grace, kindness, clemency, leniency, benevolence, forbearance << OPPOSITE cruelty 3. defenceless against, subject to, open to, exposed to, vulnerable to, threatened by, susceptible to, prey to, an easy target for, naked before, unprotected against 4. in the power of, under the control of, in the clutches of, under the heel of
Translations mercy [ˈməːsɪ] n → compasión f; at the mercy of → a la merced de
mercy [ˈməːsɪ] n → pitié f, merci f; at the mercy of → à la merci de
mercy [ˈməːsɪ] n → Gnade f; at the mercy of → ausgeliefert +dat
mercy [ˈməːsɪ] n → pietà; to have mercy on sb → aver pietà di qn; at the mercy of → alla mercè di
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