释义 |
Definition of accuser in English: accusernoun əˈkjuːzəəˈkjuzər A person who claims that someone has committed an offence or done something wrong. I dislike any law that puts the burden of proof on the accused rather than the accuser Hero faints before her three accusers leave Example sentencesExamples - His counsel establishes through cross-examination of the accuser that the stolen animal is a horse, not a mare.
- I was shaking now with rage, both at myself and at the accuser.
- He provides incontrovertible proof of his ability to defy his accusers.
- The accused country has to prove its innocence, the accuser has to prove nothing.
- Nearly more than half the town's children vanished, including every one of the accusers.
- They are accused of the act, lectured to, and forced to acknowledge the moral superiority of the accusers.
- One of the basic rights has been the right to face one's accuser.
- The need for an enemy overwhelms even the accuser's self-interest.
- Guilty, he poured the remains of the bottle over his accuser.
- In any civilized court, the decision lies with the accuser to prove that a person did what they say they did.
Rhymes abuser, boozer, bruiser, chooser, cruiser, diffuser, infuser, lollapalooza, loser, Marcuse, medusa, mezuzah, misuser, peruser, refuser, snoozer, Sousa, user, yakuza Definition of accuser in US English: accusernounəˈkyo͞ozərəˈkjuzər A person who claims that someone has committed an offense or done something wrong. I dislike any law that puts the burden of proof on the accused rather than the accuser Hero faints before her three accusers leave Example sentencesExamples - I was shaking now with rage, both at myself and at the accuser.
- The need for an enemy overwhelms even the accuser's self-interest.
- They are accused of the act, lectured to, and forced to acknowledge the moral superiority of the accusers.
- In any civilized court, the decision lies with the accuser to prove that a person did what they say they did.
- One of the basic rights has been the right to face one's accuser.
- He provides incontrovertible proof of his ability to defy his accusers.
- The accused country has to prove its innocence, the accuser has to prove nothing.
- His counsel establishes through cross-examination of the accuser that the stolen animal is a horse, not a mare.
- Guilty, he poured the remains of the bottle over his accuser.
- Nearly more than half the town's children vanished, including every one of the accusers.
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