INCRIMINATE vs ACCUSE: NOUN
- N/A
- Accusation.
- An accusation - Shakespeare
INCRIMINATE vs ACCUSE: VERB
- Suggest that someone is guilty
- To accuse or bring criminal charges against.
- To indicate the guilt of.
- Bring an accusation against; level a charge against
- To make an accusation against someone.
- To charge with having committed a crime or offence.
- To find fault with, to blame, to censure.
- Bring an accusation against; level a charge against
- Blame for, make a claim of wrongdoing or misbehavior against
INCRIMINATE vs ACCUSE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To charge with a shortcoming or error.
- To make a charge of wrongdoing against another.
- To charge formally with a wrongdoing.
INCRIMINATE vs ACCUSE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To accuse of a crime or other wrongful act.
- To cause to appear guilty of a crime or fault; implicate.
- To accuse; to charge with a crime or fault; to criminate.
- To charge with, or declare to have committed, a crime or offense.
- To charge with a fault; to blame; to censure.
- To betray; to show.
INCRIMINATE vs ACCUSE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To charge with a crime; accuse; criminate.
- To make a subject of accusation; charge as a crime.
- Synonyms Accuse, Charge, Indict, etc. See accuse.
- Bring an accusation against
- Level a charge against
- Bring an accusation against
- Level a charge against
- Synonyms Accuse, Charge, Indict, Arraign, Impeach, Incriminate, criminate, inculpate, tax with, taunt with, impute to. Of these words charge is the most general, and may be the weakest, being used of any sort of imputation, large or small, against persons or things formally or informally, publicly or privately. Accuse commonly, though not invariably, expresses something more formal and grave than charge. Indict is a purely legal term, restricted to the action of a grand jury when it makes a formal complaint against a supposed offender, in order that he may be brought to trial. Arraign has primarily the same meaning with indict, but is freer in figurative use: as, to arraign a political party at the bar of public sentiment. Impeach is to bring to answer before some legislative body for wrong-doing in a public office, and has been so long associated with the peculiar dignity, solemnity, and impressiveness of such trials that it has been lifted into corresponding importance in its figurative uses. Incriminate is obsolescent except in the special meaning of involving another with one's self: as, in his confession he incriminated several persons hitherto unsuspected. To charge with a fault; to accuse of dishonesty; to indict for felony and arraign before the court; to impeach a magistrate or one's motives or veracity; to incriminate others with one's self in a confession of guilt.
- To indicate; evince; show; manifest; show signs of.
- To make an imputation against, as of a crime, fault, or error; charge with guilt or blame; affect with specific censure: used either absolutely or with of before the thing charged, and sometimes with for before the subject of censure: as, to accuse one of high crimes, or as an accomplice in crime; to accuse nature for our misfortunes.
INCRIMINATE vs ACCUSE: RELATED WORDS
- Exonerate, Implicate, Criminalise, Confound, Blame, Penalize, Condemn, Criminalize, Confuse, Identify, Criminate, Imply, Accuse, Impeach, Inculpate
- Indicts, Indicted, Accusation, Say, Charged, Denounce, Accusations, Blame, Blaming, Blames, Criticize, Criminate, Impeach, Charge, Incriminate
INCRIMINATE vs ACCUSE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Discredit, Corroborate, Exculpate, Implicate, Criminalise, Confound, Blame, Penalize, Condemn, Criminalize, Confuse, Identify, Imply, Impeach, Inculpate
- Reproach, Prosecute, Acknowledge, Implicate, Indicted, Accusation, Say, Charged, Denounce, Accusations, Blame, Criticize, Impeach, Charge, Incriminate
INCRIMINATE vs ACCUSE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- It might incriminate me under the Fifth Amendment.
- Tribunal tending to incriminate himself; or an action.
- No, it does not intend to incriminate you.
- You have a right not to incriminate yourself.
- Confessions by accomplices which incriminate defendants arepresumptively unreliable.
- DNA evidence does nothing to incriminate the defendant.
- Chief Judge how the witness could incriminate herself.
- Flynn about events that could potentially incriminate him.
- Provided, That no witness shall be compelled to incriminate himself or to answer any questions which may tend to incriminate or degrade him.
- Act on the ground that to do so may incriminate or tend to incriminate that person.
- Importantly, the Stone Indictment does not accuse Dr.
- Now you accuse Arminians of Election by works?
- They accuse you of being rude and unfair.
- EMS should not accuse or challenge the suspectedabuser.
- They accuse protesters of trespassing on private property.
- We may accuseourselves, and men may accuse us, but God will nevertake us to court and accuse us.
- It is not helpful to accuse another editor of bad faith, much less accuse the majority of editors of bad faith.
- While Yinka is free to accuse his wife, she is not free to accuse him or defend herself.
- Historians accuse us of being too obsessed with models and maths, while economists accuse us of the exact opposite.
- They might accuse you of drunk driving or accuse you of having something illegal, like drugs.
INCRIMINATE vs ACCUSE: QUESTIONS
- Can a certificate be used to incriminate a witness?
- Did Matt Gaetz's ex-girlfriend try to incriminate him on a call?
- Did Donnie give Jordan a note that told him not to incriminate himself?
- How do people unintentionally incriminate themselves in a pending case?
- How did Underwood and Stamper get Kapeniak to incriminate Kern?
- Why does Krogstad accuse Christine of betraying him?
- What did Bhindranwale accuse Indira Gandhi of doing?
- Why did Elizabeth accuse Justine of killing William?
- Why does Mycroft accuse Sherlock of hoarding Watson?
- What did Erdogan accuse NATO of supporting terrorists?
- What did Priya Vandrevala accuse Niranjan Hiranandani of?
- Why did Messalina accuse Valerius Asiaticus and Suilius?
- When do manipulators accuse the victim of wrongdoing?
- Did Kristen Waggoner accuse Yale students of harassment?
- Who does Pendrick accuse of stealing his invention?