venial — able to be forgiven; not seriously wrong or harmful
Part of speech: ADJECTIVE
Definition: able to be forgiven; not seriously wrong or harmful
Pronunciation (IPA): /ˈviːniəl/
Korean meaning: 용서할 수 있는; 심각하지 않은 잘못이나 죄
Korean pronunciation: **비**니얼
Example Sentences
- Forgetting to say 'please' is a venial breach of etiquette, unlike insulting the host.
- My roommate considers leaving dirty dishes a venial sin, but using his toothbrush is unforgivable.
- In her mother's eyes, arriving five minutes late was venial, but skipping dinner entirely was not.
venial
ADJECTIVE//ˈviːniəl//
able to be forgiven; not seriously wrong or harmful

A mother treats her child's plate-breaking accident as venial and forgives easily

Very Nile pharaoh forgives tiny pyramid mistakes with a smile

The genial judge finds the crime venial, while his aide does menial work!
🎤Pronunciation
🌳Etymology
Origin
From Latin 'venia' meaning forgiveness or pardon, referring to mercy granted by Roman emperors to offenders. In Christian theology, it developed to describe minor sins that could be easily forgiven, as opposed to mortal sins.
🎵Rhyme
🔗Collocations
📝Examples
“Forgetting to say 'please' is a venial breach of etiquette, unlike insulting the host.”
“My roommate considers leaving dirty dishes a venial sin, but using his toothbrush is unforgivable.”
“In her mother's eyes, arriving five minutes late was venial, but skipping dinner entirely was not.”
“The teacher treated spelling mistakes as venial errors but plagiarism as a serious offense.”
📚Related Words
Synonyms
Antonyms
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