BLAME vs INCULPATION: NOUN
- A reproach for some lapse or misdeed
- An accusation that you are responsible for some lapse or misdeed
- The state of being responsible for a fault or error; culpability.
- Censure; condemnation.
- An expression of disapproval of something deemed to be wrong; imputation of a fault; censure; reprehension.
- That which is deserving of censure or disapprobation; fault; crime; sin.
- Culpability for something negative or undesirable.
- Censure.
- An expression of disapprobation fir something deemed to be wrong; imputation of fault; censure.
- Hurt; injury.
- Culpability; responsibility for something that is wrong: as, the blame is yours.
- Responsibility for something meriting censure.
- An accusation that you are responsible for some lapse or misdeed
- Blame; censure; crimination.
- The act of inculpating, or the state of being inculpated; incrimination.
BLAME vs INCULPATION: ADJECTIVE
- Expletives used informally as intensifiers
- N/A
BLAME vs INCULPATION: VERB
- Harass with constant criticism
- Attribute responsibility to
- To assert or consider that someone is the cause of something negative; to place blame, to attribute responsibility (for something negative or for doing something negative).
- To bring into disrepute.
- To censure (someone or something); to criticize.
- Put or pin the blame on
- N/A
BLAME vs INCULPATION: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To be blamed, or deserving blame; in fault; as, the conductor was to blame for the accident.
- To bring reproach upon; to blemish.
- To censure; to express disapprobation of; to find fault with; to reproach.
- To place responsibility for (something).
- To find fault with; criticize.
- To consider responsible for a misdeed, failure, or undesirable outcome.
- N/A
BLAME vs INCULPATION: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To express disapprobation of; find fault with; censure: opposed to praise or commend.
- Formerly it might be followed by of.
- To charge; impute as a fault; lay the responsibility of: as, he blames the failure on you.
- To bring reproach upon; blemish; injure.
- [In such phrases as he is to blame, to blame, by an old and common construction, has the passive meaning ‘to be blamed, blamable.’ Compare a house to let, hire, build; grain ready to cut, etc.
- In writers of the Elizabethan period it was often written too blame, blame apparently being mistaken for an adjective.] Synonyms To reprove, reproach, chide, upbraid, reprehend. See decry.
- (idiom) (to blame) Deserving censure or disapproval; at fault.
- (idiom) (to blame) Being the cause or source of something.
- N/A
BLAME vs INCULPATION: RELATED WORDS
- Everlasting, Infernal, Blessed, Pick, Goddam, Darned, Goddamn, Goddamned, Rap, Damn, Blasted, Damned, Charge, Cursed, Fault
- N/A
BLAME vs INCULPATION: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Everlasting, Infernal, Blessed, Pick, Goddam, Darned, Goddamn, Goddamned, Rap, Damn, Blasted, Damned, Charge, Cursed, Fault
- N/A
BLAME vs INCULPATION: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- So I do not blame you for being molded this way, I do however blame you for not trying to change and adapt.
- Who is to blame, if anyone is to blame?
- They blame nexstar and mission companies and companies blame dish.
- If there is malpractice you can blame SW for a miscarriage of justice, you can certainly blame them for dishonesty.
- She knows, deep down, that there is no one to blame but Corypheus, but she needs to blame someone, anyone.
- It if far more noble to accept the blame yourself for something you did wrong than to try to blame it on others.
- Sometimes they blame themselves, but often they blame their partner.
- They blame the fuel, they blame me, they blame the installer.
- Blame judgments told a different story: mental states continued to be critical, but blame was additionally influenced by consequences.
- When people blame a scapegoat, how do you think they choose evidence to support the blame?
- In the inculpation of an accused person the evidentiary circumstances must bear no other reasonable explanation.
- Pinochet reste sous la menace d une inculpation au Chili Dedinje, sur les hauteurs de Belgrade.
BLAME vs INCULPATION: QUESTIONS
- Is substandard housing to blame for rheumatic fever?
- What is the psychological epidemic of blame-blaming?
- Should caregivers blame the elderly for their dementia?
- Is the obesogenic environment to blame for obesity?
- Does Travelocity blame Aer Lingus for miscommunication?
- Should students blame professors for their reputations?
- Are institutions to blame for Economic Development?
- Should therapists blame patients for their reenactments?
- Do cheaters blame victims more than victims blame themselves?
- Is there enough blame to blame for the pension crisis?
- When does the duty of information take effect after inculpation?