It means to start the process of removal from office. It starts with an accusation.
The word "incriminate" means to accuse someone of a crime or wrongdoing.
The word convict is both a noun (convict, convicts) and a verb (convict, convicts, convicting, convicted). The noun convict is a singular, common noun, a word for aperson found guilty of a criminal offense and serving a sentence of imprisonment.
The word "convict" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a person found guilty of a crime. As a verb, it means to declare someone guilty of a crime.
The word you are looking for is "hypocrisy." It refers to the practice of claiming to have moral standards or beliefs to which one's own behavior does not conform.
Hi, Some other words for criminal are: offender convict prisoner felon lawbreaker delinquent villain for more use a thesaurus
convict, accuse, and blame
The word "incriminate" means to accuse someone of a crime or wrongdoing.
Another word for accuse is blame and critized.
to charge a person, or persons with some fault, an offence or a crime
The word "accuse" means "to charge a person with a crime or claim that a person has done something wrong". If you accuse someone of something, you are implicating that they have done something wrong.
I accuse you of taking up my time to answer this question! I can be argued that to accuse him of a crime he did not commit would be wrong.
acusar
The suffixes words of "convict" could be "convicted" and "conviction."
The word accuse is a verb: accuse, accuses, accusing, accused. The noun forms for the verb to accuse are accuser, and the gerund, accusing. Another noun form is accusation.
From the Latin word 'convictus' and known in English from about 1350 as 'convicten' later to be shortened to convict
The word "indict" means to formally charge or accuse someone with a serious crime. Some synonyms for the word "indict" are "incriminate", "arraign", and "impeach".
Kaidi.