To sickening degree in Latin
"Mea culpa"
Vac is Latin
Ego IS a Latin word. It is the Latin for I.
he who smelt it, dealt it.
solus is the latin word for alone ( it is a latin root and can have endings added to it )
"Folium" means "leaf" in Latin.
Culp
Fault/blame
The English equivalent of the Latin phrase 'mea culpa' is 'my blame' or 'my fault'. The opposite is a lack of blame, or fault, which is innocence. And the corresponding antonym in Latin therefore is mea innocentia, which means 'my innocence'.
It is from the Latin and literally means "Blame (culpa) is mine (mea)"
Culpant is the third person plural present indicative of the verb culpo, which means "blame".Ergo, culpant means "they blame".
The Latin root culp- means 'fault'. One derivative is the noun 'culpa', which means 'blame, fault'. Another derivative is the infinitive 'culpare', which means 'to accuse, blame, disapprove, find fault with'. Yet another derivative is the infinitive 'culpitare', which means 'to blame severely'.
Blame the Romans - it's a stylistic artifact of Latin.
The Latin root "culpa" refers to "fault" or "blame." Another related root is "peccare," which means "to sin" or "to be at fault." These roots are used in various words like "culpable" and "peccadillo" to convey the idea of blame or fault.
blame it on the goose
No one to blame.
If you are referring to: "Don't blame it on sunshine, Don't blame it on moonlight, Don't blame it on good times". Then the song you are after is: Blame it on the Boogie, by The Jackson Five.
Both of you If it's consentual, then you're both to blame, or neither is to blame, depending on the circumstances. In other words, the blame or non-blame is equal for both of you.