What does Accuse mean?
Definitions for Accuse
əˈkyuzac·cuse
This dictionary definitions page includes all the possible meanings, example usage and translations of the word Accuse.
Princeton's WordNet
accuse, impeach, incriminate, criminateverb
bring an accusation against; level a charge against
"The neighbors accused the man of spousal abuse"
charge, accuseverb
blame for, make a claim of wrongdoing or misbehavior against
"he charged the director with indifference"
Wiktionary
accusenoun
An accusation - Shakespeare
accuseverb
To find fault with, to blame, to censure.
accuseverb
To charge with having committed a crime or offence.
For the U.S. President to be impeached, he must be accused of a high crime or misdemeanor.
accuseverb
To make an accusation against someone.
Etymology: * First attested around 1300.
Samuel Johnson's Dictionary
To ACCUSEverb
Etymology: accuso, Lat.
He stripp’d the bears-foot of its leafy growth;
And, calling western winds accus’d the spring of sloth. John Dryden, Virgil, Georg. iv. l. 205.The professors are accused of all the ill practices which may seem to be the ill consequences of their principles. Joseph Addison, on Italy.
Never send up a leg of a fowl at supper, while there is a cat or dog in the house, that can be accused for running away with it: But, if there happen to be neither, you must lay it upon the rats, or a strange greyhound. Jonathan Swift, Directions to the Cook.
Their conscience bearing witness, and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another. Rom. ii. 15.
Your valour would your sloth too much accuse,
And therefore, like themselves, they princes choose. John Dryden, Tyrannick Love.
Wikipedia
Accuse
An accusation is a statement by one person asserting that another person or entity has done something improper. The person who makes the accusation is an accuser, while the subject against whom it is made is the accused. Whether a statement is interpreted as an accusation relies on the social environment in which it is made: What counts as an accusation is often unclear, and what kind of response is warranted is even less clear. Even a purely surface semantic analysis of accusatory language cannot be performed in the absence of social context, including who is making the accusation and to whom it is being made—often the subject of supposedly accusatory language might well interpret the utterance in question as something that he need not respond to. An accusation can be made in private or in public, to the accused person alone, or to other people with or without the knowledge of the accused person. An accuser can make an accusation with or without evidence; the accusation can be entirely speculative, and can even be a false accusation, made out of malice, for the purpose of harming the reputation of the accused.
ChatGPT
accuse
Accuse is a verb which means to claim that someone has done something wrong or illegal, typically without providing evidence or proof. It often involves formal charges in a judicial context but can also occur in a casual setting.
accuse
To accuse means to charge someone with an offense or crime; to make a claim that a person is responsible for wrongdoing, misconduct, or a violation; or to blame someone for an action that is considered unacceptable or damaging.
Webster Dictionary
Accusenoun
accusation
Accuseverb
to charge with, or declare to have committed, a crime or offense
Accuseverb
to charge with an offense, judicially or by a public process; -- with of; as, to accuse one of a high crime or misdemeanor
Accuseverb
to charge with a fault; to blame; to censure
Accuseverb
to betray; to show. [L.]
Chambers 20th Century Dictionary
Accuse
ak-kūz′, v.t. to bring a charge against: to blame (with of before the thing charged, sometimes for).—adj. Accus′able, that may be accused.—ns. Accus′al, accusation; Accusā′tion, the act of accusing: the charge brought against any one.—adjs. Accusatō′rial, of an accuser; Accus′atory, containing accusation.—n. Accuse (Shak.), accusation.—p.adj. Accused′, charged with a crime: usually as a n., the person accused.—ns. Accuse′ment (Spens.), a charge; Accus′er, one who accuses or brings a charge against another. [O. Fr. acuser—L. accusāre—ad, to, causa, cause.]
British National Corpus
Verbs Frequency
Rank popularity for the word 'Accuse' in Verbs Frequency: #415
Numerology
Chaldean Numerology
The numerical value of Accuse in Chaldean Numerology is: 3
Pythagorean Numerology
The numerical value of Accuse in Pythagorean Numerology is: 7
Examples of Accuse in a Sentence
Democrats have nothing left to play but the race card given a year of devastating crime, open borders, appeasement of our enemies, and failed COVID policies, so you accuse the grandson of an orphaned poor West Texas farmer who lost his farm in the Depression of ‘white privilege’ and you go back to race-bating. Par for the course.
Our churches, pastors, and volunteers make many sacrifices to help these families, but the defendants force us to do so in fear, we are not breaking the law, but the defendants threaten us and accuse us of being law-breakers. We have been repeatedly targeted by the defendants, and now we will ask the court to stop this behavior so that we can continue our mission in peace.
He had not been leading on issues of any significance, in my time in the Senate, you can accuse me of being a lot of things, but a back-bencher is not one of them.
They're doing exactly what they accuse others of doing, of judging others, generalizing other populations about knowing their experience.
Ryan has all the right to think the way he does and say what he does, he did not accuse me of anything. That’s why I don’t have anything against him.
Popularity rank by frequency of use
References
Translations for Accuse
From our Multilingual Translation Dictionary
- اِتَّهَمَ, اتهمArabic
- абвінавачваць, абвінаваціцьBelarusian
- обвинявамBulgarian
- acusarCatalan, Valencian
- obviňovat, obvinitCzech
- beschuldigenGerman
- akuziEsperanto
- acusar, denunciarSpanish
- syyttääFinnish
- accuserFrench
- cuir às lethScottish Gaelic
- acusarGalician
- accusarInterlingua
- menuduh, tuduhIndonesian
- akuzarIdo
- accusareItalian
- 問う, 着せるJapanese
- დაბრალებაGeorgian
- accusareLatin
- apkaltinti, kaltintiLithuanian
- whakapaeMāori
- beschuldigenDutch
- skylde, skuldeNorwegian Nynorsk
- beskyldeNorwegian
- oskarżać, oskarżyćPolish
- acusarPortuguese
- обвинять, винить, обвинитьRussian
- okriviti, optužitiSerbo-Croatian
- obtožitiSlovene
- anklagaSwedish
- suçlamakTurkish
- звинуватити, звинувачуватиUkrainian
- 控Chinese
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