incriminate

View Synonyms
[ US /ˌɪnˈkɹɪməˌneɪt/ ]
[ UK /ɪnkɹˈɪmɪnˌe‍ɪt/ ]
VERB
  1. suggest that someone is guilty
  2. bring an accusation against; level a charge against
    The neighbors accused the man of spousal abuse
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How To Use incriminate In A Sentence

  • Cindy got the tape that incriminates Grant after she heard Marley tell Jake where it was hidden.
  • No woman, Ha'aretz reported, had failed the task of shooting what the army calls an "incriminated" Palestinian. Window Into Palestine
  • No woman, Haaretz reported, had failed the task of shooting what the army calls an "incriminated IToot Stream
  • The CLA said 580 of these 1,200 had been conclusively "incriminated" as members of Hamas and other terrorist groups. A true picture of casualties in Gaza...
  • Since bookmaking was a criminal offense under state and federal laws, Marchetti was forced either to violate the law by not registering or to incriminate himself.
  • [14] yet the dictionary doesn't yet recognize it exculpatory often used in the phrase "exculpatory evidence," it took nearly 50 years to develop this term after origination of the legal term suggesting guilt: "incriminate" falsifiability first emphasized by Karl Popper in 1934, this helps define science: if a proposition is false, then it can be shown to be false. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
  • One reason is that such perpetrators do not 'incriminate' themselves by setting up specific websites for their purposes, but often lurk in popular chatrooms used by the public, said a Media Development Authority (MDA) official. Www.hardwarezone.com.sg
  • The report is from France and mentions that the achilles tendon is most commonly involved and that the tendonitis is more likely to occur in patients also taking fluroquinolones or steroids, both of which have been incriminated with tendon problems even though steroids are used to acutely treat tendinitis but long term steroid use may increase risk of rupture. Archive 2008-03-01
  • Under Scottish law at present, suspects can be questioned by police for six hours without a lawyer, but yesterday the supreme court found that the measure made it more likely that suspects might "incriminate" themselves while being quizzed by officers. Scotland rushes through new laws after court ruling on questioning suspects
  • You do not have to answer the questions if you believe the answers might incriminate you.
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