Dictionary Definition
leniency
Noun
2 a disposition to yield to the wishes of
someone; "too much indulgence spoils a child" [syn: indulgence, lenience]
3 lightening a penalty or excusing from a chore
by judges or parents or teachers [syn: lenience]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
leniency (Plural: leniencies)- The quality of mercy or forgiveness, especially in the assignment of punishment as in a court case.
Translations
quality of mercy or forgiveness, especially in
the assignment of punishment as in a court case
- German: Milde
Extensive Definition
Mercy (Middle
English, from Anglo-French
merci, from Medieval
Latin merced-, merces, from Latin, "price paid,
wages", from merc-, merx "merchandise") can refer both to
compassionate behaviour on the part of those in power (e.g. mercy
shown by a judge toward a convict) or on the part of a humanitarian
third party (e.g. a mission of mercy aiming to treat war victims).
Mercy is a term used to describe the leniency or compassion shown by one
person to another, or a request from one person to another to be
shown such leniency or unwarranted compassion for a crime or
wrongdoing. One of the basic virtues of chivalry, Christian
ethics and Islam, it is also
related to concepts of justice and morality in behaviour between
people. In India, compassion is known as karuna.
In a legal sense, a defendant having been found
guilty of a capital
crime may ask for clemency from being executed.
To be "mercy", the behavior generally can not be
compelled by outside forces. (A famous literary example is from
The
Merchant of Venice when Portia asks Shylock to show mercy. He
asks, On what compulsion, must I? She responds The quality of mercy
is not strained.)
A number of organizations (e.g. the Mercy Corps,
the Sisters of
Mercy, Mercyful
Fate and the
Temple of Mercy and Charity) use the word "mercy" in their name
to describe their work.
References
- Ralf van Bühren: Die Werke der Barmherzigkeit in der Kunst des 12.–18. Jahrhunderts. Zum Wandel eines Bildmotivs vor dem Hintergrund neuzeitlicher Rhetorikrezeption (Studien zur Kunstgeschichte, vol. 115), Hildesheim / Zürich / New York: Verlag Georg Olms 1998. ISBN 3-487-10319-2
- Sterling Harwood, "Is Mercy Inherently Unjust?," in Michael J. Gorr and Sterling Harwood, eds., Crime and Punishment: Philosophic Explorations (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Co., 2000, formerly Boston, MA: Jones and Bartlett Publishers, 1996), pp. 464-470.
- Jeffrie G. Murphy, "Mercy and Legal Justice," in Michael J. Gorr and Sterling Harwood, eds., Crime and Punishment: Philosophic Explorations (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Co., 2000, formerly Boston, MA: Jones and Bartlett Publishers, 1996), pp. 454-463.
- Lampert, K.(2005); Traditions of Compassion: From Religious Duty to Social Activism. Palgrave-Macmillan
- Witt, David (2008); "Mercy"
leniency in Czech: Milosrdenství
leniency in German: Barmherzigkeit
leniency in Spanish: Misericordia
leniency in Esperanto: Mizerikordo
leniency in French: Clémence
leniency in Hebrew: רחמים
leniency in Dutch: Barmhartigheid
leniency in Polish: Miłosierdzie
leniency in Slovak: Milosrdenstvo
leniency in Swedish: Barmhärtighet
leniency in Ukrainian: Милосердя
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abatement, acceptance, accommodatingness,
agreeableness,
allayment, alleviation, assuagement, attentiveness, benevolence, blunting, calming, carelessness, charitableness, charity, clemency, commiseration, compassion, complaisance, concern, condolence, condonation, considerateness,
consideration,
damping, deadening, delicacy, demulsion, diminution, downiness, dulcification, dulling, easiness, easing, easygoingness, endurance, falling-off,
favor, featheriness, feeling, flossiness, fluffiness, forbearance, forbearing, forbearingness, forgiveness, fortitude, generousness, gentleness, grace, heedfulness, helpfulness, humanity, hushing, impotence, imprecision, indifference, indulgence, insolidity, kindness, laxity, laxness, lenience, lenity, lessening, letdown, letup, lightening, long-sufferance,
long-suffering, longanimity, looseness, loosening, lulling, magnanimity, mellowness, mercifulness, mercy, mindfulness, mitigation, modulation, mollification, morbidezza, negligence, nonresistiveness,
nonrigidity,
obligingness,
overindulgence,
overpermissiveness,
pacification,
palliation, pardon, pathos, patience, patience of Job,
patientness,
permissiveness,
perseverance,
pity, plushiness, pulpiness, quarter, quietening, quieting, reduction, regard, regardfulness, relaxation, relaxedness, relief, remission, remissness, reprieve, ruth, satininess, self-control,
self-pity, silkiness,
slackening, slackness, sloppiness, softening, softness, solicitousness, solicitude, soothing, sponginess, stoicism, subduement, sufferance, sweet
reasonableness, sympathy, tact, tactfulness, tempering, tenderness, thought, thoughtfulness, tolerance, toleration, tranquilization,
unrestraint,
unsolidity, velvetiness, waiting game,
waiting it out, weakness