vindicatory

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English

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Etymology

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From vindicate +‎ -ory.

Adjective

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vindicatory (comparative more vindicatory, superlative most vindicatory)

  1. Promoting or producing vindication.
    • 1995, Douglas Vickers, The Tyranny of the Market, →ISBN, page 77:
      The principal vindicatory feature of the market system . . . rests in the fact that it permits and facilitates an intermarket and intersectoral flow of economic values.
  2. Promoting or producing retribution or punishment.
    • 1800, The Annual Register, volume 39, London: J. Dodsley, published 1797, page 486:
      To prevent the strong from oppressing the weak; to protect the acquisitions of industry . . . are duties which require that delegated authority should be exerted by public force and the vindicatory dispensations of pains and penalties.

Synonyms

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Derived terms

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References

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  • Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., 1989.