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Looking for synonyms for "blame"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(n)
Blame; censure; crimination.
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(adj)
(sometimes vulgar) Generic intensifier. Fucking; bloody.
(v)
(intransitive, idiomatic, often followed by with) To criticize something excessively.
The act of incriminating someone.
(typically uncountable) Culpability; the responsibility for a blameworthy event.
Under some divine harm, malady, or other curse.
Archaic spelling of cursed, simple past and past participle of curse.
(euphemistic) A minced oath for damned, used to express contempt, exasperation, consternation, etc. towards someone or something.
(often offensive) Used as an intensifier expressing anger.
(vulgar, sometimes offensive) Used as an intensifier.
(adv)
(mildly vulgar) Very.
(euphemistic, dated) Damned.
Lasting or enduring forever; endless, eternal.
(slang) Intoxicated, drunk.
(countable) A sharp blow with something hard.
The amount of money levied for a service.
Having divine aid, or protection, or other blessing.
Of or relating to hell, or the world of the dead; hellish.
A tool used for digging; a pickaxe.
Responsibility for wrongdoing.
The act of blaming, criticizing, or condemning as wrong; reprehension.
The degree of one's blameworthiness in the commission of a crime or offence.
The act of condemning or pronouncing to be wrong.
(law) Judged to have committed a crime.
The person or thing at fault for a problem or crime.
(transitive) To strongly criticise or denounce; to excoriate.
A person who commits an offense against the law, a lawbreaker.
Responsibility; burden.
(transitive, law, followed by "of") To charge with having committed a crime or offence.
(transitive, with of or against) To advise against wrongdoing; to caution; to warn against danger or an offense.
To find fault (with something).
One who perpetrates; especially, one who commits an offence or crime.
To reprove in a formal or official way.
Non-Oxford British English standard spelling of criticize. [To find fault (with something).]
(of a person) To criticise harshly; to reprove.
(transitive) To criticize or rebuke (someone).
The act of accusing.
(uncountable) The act of criticising; a critical judgment passed or expressed
(transitive) To indicate the guilt of.
(theology) A violation of divine will or religious law.
(uncountable) Violation of standards of behavior.
(transitive) To make (something) a crime; to make illegal under criminal law; to ban.
Behavior that is considered to be unacceptable.
An error.
To accuse of wrongdoing; charge.
The state of being negligent.
(transitive, stative) To be without, not to have, to need, to require.
(transitive) To feel resentment over; to consider as an affront.
weakness; defect
(transitive) To wish for or desire (something); to feel a need or desire for; to crave, hanker, or demand.
One who accuses; one who brings a charge of crime or fault.
(transitive, law) To find guilty, as a result of legal proceedings, or (informal) in a moral sense.
A duty, obligation or liability for which someone is held accountable.
Obliged, when called upon, to answer (for one’s deeds); answerable.
(law) The person charged with an offense; the defendant in a criminal case.
(law) An associate in the commission of a crime; a participator in an offense, whether a principal or an accessory.
(intransitive) To express feelings of pain, dissatisfaction, or resentment.
To move toward the speaker.
(transitive) To admit the knowledge of; to recognize as a fact or truth; to declare one's belief in.
(transitive) To attribute or ascribe (responsibility or fault) to a cause or source.
(countable, uncountable) That which one is morally or legally obligated to do.
(law) An official formal accusation for a criminal offence, or the process by which it is brought to a jury.
(transitive) To attribute (a cause or characteristic) to someone or something.
(countable, often with of, typically of adverse results) The source of, or reason for, an event or action; that which produces or effects a result.
An obligation, debt or responsibility owed to someone.
A characteristic or quality of a thing.
State of owing money; being in debt.
A light blow or jolting collision.
(finance) Money that one person or entity owes or is required to pay to another, generally as a result of a loan or other financial transaction.
Transportation.
A hat.
(anatomy) A slender jointed extremity of the human hand, (often) exclusive of the thumb.
An alcoholic beverage made by fermenting grape juice, with an ABV ranging from 5.5–16%.
(transitive) To criticise, rebuke, or reprimand (someone), usually in a gentle and kind tone.
(transitive) To admonish in blame; to reproach angrily.
(with on, (archaic) for) To officially charge someone in a court of law.
(transitive, usually with in) To show to be connected or involved in an unfavorable or criminal way.
(ambitransitive) To rebuke angrily.
Responsibility for something meriting censure.
Someone unfairly blamed or punished for some failure.
Deserving blame
Meriting condemnation, censure or blame, especially as something wrong, harmful or injurious; blameworthy, guilty.
blameworthy
Alternative spelling of blamable. [Deserving blame]
(countable, uncountable) An explanation designed to avoid or alleviate guilt or negative judgment; a plea offered in extenuation of a fault.
The act of making somebody a scapegoat.