accredit, arraign, attribute, charge, denunciate, hang something on, indict, lay, place, refer, take to task
Definitionv. attribute or credit to
Last update: July 26, 2015
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Her character in the court was badly imputed by the lawyer. [verb]
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Lionel then goes on to impute the shock to an earthquake, and seems to substantiate the imputation by stating that a great earthquake, somewhere about that time, did actually do great mischief along the Spanish land. [verb]
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(i.) The evangelists impute to him a higher claim than he made. [verb]
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To Reuben, therefore, a peer was like a god; and he would have no more questioned Lord Fareham's will than a disciple of Hobbes would have imputed injustice to Kings. [verb]
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To impute sinful passions, guilty desires--to enter into another man's mind, and read the secret cipher of his thoughts and wishes with an assumed key, which might be false. [verb]
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I impute no guilt; but between innocence and guilt there need be but one passionate hour. [verb]
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God forbid that I should impute one unworthy thought to her whose virtues I honour above all earthly merit. [verb]
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"I trust Miss Wardour will impute, to circumstances almost irresistible, this intrusion of a person who has reason to think himself--so unacceptable a visitor." [verb]
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Oldbuck, either in his pedigree, or the history imputed to the ideal personage. [verb]
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