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  1. Dictionary
    mercy
    /ˈməːsi/

    noun

    exclamation

    • 1. used in expressions of surprise or fear: archaic "‘Mercy me!’ uttered Mrs Diggory"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. MERCY definition: 1. kindness that makes you forgive someone, usually someone that you have authority over: 2. to be…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of MERCY is compassion or forbearance shown especially to an offender or to one subject to one's power; also : lenient or compassionate treatment. How to use mercy in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Mercy.

  4. If you refer to an event or situation as a mercy, you mean that it makes you feel happy or relieved, usually because it stops something unpleasant happening. It really was a mercy that he'd died so rapidly at the end. The two cars finished up in a run-off area, clear of the circuit, and that was a mercy.

  5. MERCY meaning: 1. kindness that makes you forgive someone, usually someone that you have authority over: 2. to be…. Learn more.

  6. If you have mercy on someone, you let them off the hook or are kind to them somehow. This is a quality that has to do with compassion, forgiveness, and leniency. If convicted of a crime, you might plead for the judge's mercy, meaning a lesser punishment.

  7. noun. /ˈmɜːsi/. /ˈmɜːrsi/. (plural mercies) Idioms. [uncountable] a kind or forgiving attitude towards somebody that you have the power to harm or right to punish synonym humanity. to ask/beg/plead for mercy. They showed no mercy to their hostages. God have mercy on us.

  8. 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.

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