Meaning
An alibi is proof or a claim that a person was somewhere else when a crime or other event happened, showing that they could not have been responsible.
Simple meaning:
Evidence or a explanation showing you were somewhere else at the time of an incident.
Pronunciation
Alibi
AL-uh-byeParts of Speech
- Noun
- Verb (to alibi someone means to provide an alibi for them)
Hindi Meaning
рдЕрдиреБрдкрд╕реНрдерд┐рддрд┐ рдХрд╛ рдкреНрд░рдорд╛рдг
рдШрдЯрдирд╛ рдХреЗ рд╕рдордп рдХрд╣реАрдВ рдФрд░ рд╣реЛрдиреЗ рдХрд╛ рд╕рдмреВрдд
рдмреЗрдЧреБрдирд╛рд╣реА рдХрд╛ рдкреНрд░рдорд╛рдг
рдмрд╣рд╛рдирд╛ (informal usage)Origin
The word alibi comes from the Latin word alibi, meaning тАЬelsewhereтАЭ
It entered English in the 18th century as a legal term. Originally, it referred to the defense that an accused person was somewhere else when the crime occurred.
Later, it also came to mean an excuse in everyday language.
Examples
- The police checked his alibi before questioning other suspects.
- She has a strong alibi, so the detectives ruled her out.
- Can anyone confirm your alibi?
- His alibi was supported by security camera footage.
- тАЬI was stuck in trafficтАЭ sounded more like an alibi than the truth. (informal).
Synonyms
- Proof of absence
- Defense
- Justification (in informal use)
- Excuse (informal)
Antonyms
- Confession
- Admission of guilt
- Evidence of guilt
- Incrimination
- Proof of presence
Common Mistakes
тЭМ Alibi means "innocent."
тЬЕ An alibi is evidence that supports innocence, not innocence itself.
тЭМ Everyone's excuse is an alibi.
тЬЕ In its strict legal sense, an alibi specifically means being elsewhere when the event happened.





