Word Meanings - ACCUSINGLY - Book Publishers vocabulary database
In an accusing manner.
Related words: (words related to ACCUSINGLY)
- ACCUSATIVELY
1. In an accusative manner. 2. In relation to the accusative case in grammar. - ACCUSTOMARILY
Customarily. - ACCUSTOMEDNESS
Habituation. Accustomedness to sin hardens the heart. Bp. Pearce. - ACCUSE
Accusation. Shak. - ACCUSTOMABLE
Habitual; customary; wonted. "Accustomable goodness." Latimer. - MANNERIST
One addicted to mannerism; a person who, in action, bearing, or treatment, carries characteristic peculiarities to excess. See citation under Mannerism. - ACCUSANT
An accuser. Bp. Hall. - ACCUSATIVAL
Pertaining to the accusative case. - ACCUSER
One who accuses; one who brings a charge of crime or fault. - MANNERISM
Adherence to a peculiar style or manner; a characteristic mode of action, bearing, or treatment, carried to excess, especially in literature or art. Mannerism is pardonable,and is sometimes even agreeable, when the manner, though vicious, is natural - ACCUSINGLY
In an accusing manner. - ACCUSATION
1. The act of accusing or charging with a crime or with a lighter offense. We come not by the way of accusation To taint that honor every good tongue blesses. Shak. 2. That of which one is accused; the charge of an offense or crime, or - ACCUSATIVE
Applied to the case (as the fourth case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses the immediate object on which the action or influence of a transitive verb terminates, or the immediate object of motion or tendency to, expressed by a preposition. - ACCUSEMENT
Accusation. Chaucer. - ACCUSTOMABLY
According to custom; ordinarily; customarily. Latimer. - ACCUSATORIALLY
By way accusation. - ACCUSATORY
Pertaining to, or containing, an accusation; as, an accusatory libel. Grote. - ACCUSTOMARY
Usual; customary. Featley. - ACCUSED
Charged with offense; as, an accused person. Note: Commonly used substantively; as, the accused, one charged with an offense; the defendant in a criminal case. - MANNERLINESS
The quality or state of being mannerly; civility; complaisance. Sir M. Hale. - REACCUSE
To accuse again. Cheyne. - UNMANNERLY
Not mannerly; ill-bred; rude. -- adv. - DISACCUSTOM
To destroy the force of habit in; to wean from a custom. Johnson. - PREACCUSATION
Previous accusation. - SELF-ACCUSED
Accused by one's self or by one's conscience. "Die self- accused." Cowper. - OVERMANNER
In an excessive manner; excessively. Wiclif. - ACCUSTOM
To make familiar by use; to habituate, familiarize, or inure; - - with to. I shall always fear that he who accustoms himself to fraud in little things, wants only opportunity to practice it in greater. Adventurer. Syn. -- To habituate;