| mend- (Latin: defect, blemish).amend: 1. To free (a person) from faults, correct, reform, turn from wrong, convert.  2. To reform oneself, abandon one's faults or evil ways. 3. In law, to correct (an error committed in a legal process), or rectify (a legal document). 4. To repair or make good (what is broken or damaged). 5. The change from e- to a- took place very early, being found in Old French and Middle English. amendatory: Intended or serving to correct or improve something.
 amendment: 1. The action of amending, whether in process, or as completed.  2. The removal of a fault; to make a correction or reformation. 3. In a Public Meeting: A proposed alteration in the terms of a resolution submitted to a meeting for adoption; extended to a resolution proposed instead of or in opposition to another; a countermotion. amendable: That which can be amended, corrected, bettered, repaired, or make amends for.
 amends: 1.  Reparation, retribution, restitution, compensation, satisfaction; especially in the phrase, to make amends.  2. Something done or given as compensation for a wrong or sometimes even a perceived wrong. emend: 1. To free (a thing) from faults, correct (what is faulty), rectify.  2. To remove errors from (the text of a book or document). 3. To make corrections or alteration to improve a text. emendation: Improvement by alteration and correction; especially of literary or artistic products, methods of procedure, scientific systems, etc.; a particular instance of such improvement.
 mend: 1. To free (a person, his character or habits) from sin or fault; to improve morally; to reform; occasionally, to cure of (a fault).  2. To remove the defects of (a thing); to correct (what is faulty); to improve by correction or alteration. |