0 past simple and past participle of incriminate
1 to make someone seem guilty, especially of a crime:
One well-informed missionary incriminated all of these men as well as six others.
More than 400 species of fish can be vectors of ciguatoxins, but only a small number are regularly incriminated.
The same pattern was exhibited by all 15 isolates from different lots of two brands of fish gratin produced by the incriminated factory.
Origin vertices of infinite branchings also remain connected after removing the incriminated edges.
The evidence collected from statistics again mainly incriminates cigarettes, but in animals what is incriminated is the animal's nicotine intake.
If an officer is incriminated, if an offence is alleged.
Many of the men intimately acquainted with the reasons for his dismissal would have had to give evidence which might have incriminated even themselves.
A person often says he does not want to incriminate himself because he does not want to be incriminated.