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incriminating

[ US /ˌɪnˈkɹɪməˌneɪtɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /ɪnkɹˈɪmɪnˌe‍ɪtɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. charging or suggestive of guilt or blame
    incriminatory testimony

How To Use incriminating In A Sentence

  • The doctored version in the speech is incriminating, but "clean out" is not the same as "inspect," and "make sure there is nothing there" is invented out of whole cloth. Marty Kaplan: R-E-S-P-E-C-T for Colin Powell
  • And like typical criminals, the felonious five left their incriminating fingerprints everywhere, showing an unmistakable consciousness of guilt on their part.
  • It is also true that some of the incriminating statements quoted in it are fairly innocuous.
  • I want to make it clear that there is a distinction between secrecy and privileged information, or incriminating oneself.
  • Surveyors, prospecting for a new railway line between Hamley and Ashcombe, discover Dunster's body and an incriminating knife belonging to Dixon.
  • It would be curious if so incriminating an item were to be found so ill-concealed by a surprise raid nine months after the alleged use of that weapon.
  • When, on several occasions, McGregor stares at possibly incriminating photos of Lang from his moppish days at university, the Photoshop work on display is supposed to be cheeky, but instead the phoniness is awful. Movie Review: Roman Polanski’s The Ghost Writer is Terrible (This Review Includes an Exclusive Note from Alfred Hitchcock’s Ghost) | /Film
  • Concealment devices basically could be any every day object, in which you hide potentially incriminating materials.
  • There is plenty of evidence that he was vulnerable in the interview situation and said things to please the police, but rather less that he was suggestible to the point of giving consciously self-incriminating admissions.
  • Sometimes the humble person who has helped a disguised king fears the worst when the latter's identity is revealed - has he behaved disrespectfully, or said anything seditious or incriminating?
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