incriminate 的定义
in·crim·i·nat·ed, in·crim·i·nat·ing.
- to accuse of or present proof of a crime or fault: He incriminated both men to the grand jury.
- to involve in an accusation; cause to be or appear to be guilty; implicate: His testimony incriminated his friend. He feared incriminating himself if he answered.
- to charge with responsibility for all or part of an undesirable situation, harmful effect, etc.: to incriminate cigarettes as a cause of lung cancer.
incriminate 近义词
accuse
更多incriminate例句
- The man who incriminated Riser said the officer promised to pay nearly $10,000 once both bodies were dumped in the Trinity River.
- She originally set out to archive content posted to Parler last Wednesday in hopes of preserving self-incriminating material before account holders came to their senses and deleted it.
- During the Prohibition era, she was responsible for breaking codes used by narcotics and alcohol smugglers, incriminating high-profile mob-run rum rings, including that of Al Capone in New Orleans.
- Roy McGrath said he was invoking “those rights guaranteed to me through the laws of the state of Maryland and the state and federal constitutions” — apparently referring to the right not to incriminate himself.
- By showing that Ghosn had been forced to incriminate himself while in jail, the panel of lawyers were in effect throwing the government’s entire case in doubt.
- “Arias had a terrific memory for just about everything except for those aspects of the case that incriminate her,” he says.
- According to a knowledgeable source, Hernandez began to incriminate himself only after more than an hour of questioning.
- In other words, he asked Elena Kagan to incriminate herself.
- Those letters incriminate you to the full in this infamous matter here at Condillac.
- No man is called upon to incriminate himself in this free and independent country.
- "You are not required to confess or incriminate yourself, unless you want to," Captain Foster advised the prisoner.
- He is hereby warned of his right under the law to challenge any question which may incriminate or tend to incriminate him.
- If the worst came to the worst, and the boy came to harm, the paper would incriminate nobody.