Definition of Inculpation

1. Noun. An accusation that you are responsible for some lapse or misdeed. "The police laid the blame on the driver"

Exact synonyms: Blame, Incrimination
Generic synonyms: Accusal, Accusation
Specialized synonyms: Self-incrimination
Derivative terms: Blame, Blame, Incriminate, Incriminate, Inculpate

Definition of Inculpation

1. n. Blame; censure; crimination.

Definition of Inculpation

1. Noun. Blame; censure; crimination. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Inculpation

1. [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Inculpation

inculcations
inculcator
inculcators
inculk
inculked
inculking
inculks
inculpability
inculpable
inculpableness
inculpably
inculpate
inculpated
inculpates
inculpating
inculpation (current term)
inculpations
inculpative
inculpatory
incult
incultivated
incultivation
inculturation
incumbencies
incumbency
incumbent
incumbent on(p)
incumbently
incumbents
incumber

Literary usage of Inculpation

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Treatise on Judicial Evidence by Jeremy Bentham, Etienne Dumont (1825)
"EXAMINATION OF ANOTHER CASE OF VEXATION : SELF-inculpation.* i . TUB most remarkable singularity of the law of England is the rule which ..."

2. Memoirs of Benjamin Franklin by Benjamin Franklin, William Temple Franklin, William Duane (1859)
"... directe« himself to an inculpation of the assembly ant people of Massachusetts, and violently agains the character of Dr. Franklin generally, ..."

3. The Scottish Jurist: Containing Reports of Cases Decided in the House of by Great Britain Parliament. House of Lords, House of Lords, Parliament, Great Britain (1843)
"Ai to the other grounds of defence or inculpation, the Lord Ordinary shall only say that he is satisfied with the answers for the pursuers, and conceives ..."

4. A Political Diary by Edward Law Ellenborough, Reginald Charles Edward Abbot Colchester (1881)
"Codrington has written letters of defence and inculpation to Dudley and the Admiralty. They are well written ; and as far as regards the question of the ..."

5. The Annual Register, Or, A View of the History, Politics, and Literature for by Edmund Burke (1815)
"He had not interfered, as he was sensible that the wisdom of Parliament would be able to separate the justification from the inculpation, but elsewhere the ..."

6. Annual Register by Burke, Edmund, 1729-1797, Edmund Burke (1815)
"He had not interfered, as he was sensible that the wisdom of Parliament would be able to separate the justification from the inculpation, but elsewhere the ..."

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