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recrimination

[ US /ɹɪˌkɹɪmɪˈneɪʃən/ ]
[ UK /ɹɪkɹˌɪmɪnˈe‍ɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. mutual accusations

How To Use recrimination In A Sentence

  • The affair ended in rancour and recrimination. Times, Sunday Times
  • This led to tears, recrimination and argument. Times, Sunday Times
  • But I digress (if not faff): the important point, at least for me, is that I went, I saw, I ate, I drank, but did so without regret or self-recrimination. Cheeseburger Gothic » Burger Lite 26 Feb
  • This is a time for recrimination and finger-pointing!
  • While the recriminations continued to fly, hundreds of bodies remained unclaimed in mosques at the pilgrimage site. Times, Sunday Times
  • You have obviously done some thinking that has enabled you to put bitterness and recriminations to one side. Times, Sunday Times
  • Even nonpublic reversals have been cause for recrimination.
  • A recrimination is a counter-charge, and is typically legalese and is only used in court, by a defendant against a plaintiff. David Lee Roth: Amtrak FM « BuzzMachine
  • A far juicier opportunity for recrimination occurred in March, when it was discovered that a company bookkeeper named F. M. Scott had absquatulated with some $25,000. Mark Twain
  • Replays showed that the ball had pitched outside leg stump, but it was too late for recriminations.
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