acquit vs damn

acquit

verb
  • To declare or find innocent or not guilty. 

  • Followed by of (and formerly by from): to discharge, release, or set free from a burden, duty, liability, or obligation, or from an accusation or charge. 

  • To discharge (for example, a claim or debt); to clear off, to pay off; to fulfil. 

  • To bear or conduct oneself; to perform one's part. 

  • To clear oneself. 

damn

verb
  • To condemn; to declare guilty; to doom; to adjudge to punishment. 

  • To condemn to hell. 

  • To condemn as unfit, harmful, invalid, immoral or illegal. 

  • To curse; put a curse upon. 

  • To put out of favor; to ruin; to label negatively. 

intj
  • Used to express anger, irritation, disappointment, annoyance, contempt or surprise, etc. See also dammit. 

adj
  • Generic intensifier. Fucking; bloody. 

adv
  • Very; extremely. 

noun
  • The smallest amount of concern or consideration. 

  • The use of "damn" as a curse. 

  • A small, negligible quantity, being of little value; a whit or jot. 

How often have the words acquit and damn occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )