0 present participle of indict
1 If a law court or a grand jury indicts someone, it accuses them officially of a crime:
Impressions examines the profession of authorship, indicting profit-seeking at the expense of moral responsibility.
Finally, due to the wealth of research indicting gender differences in the rate and timing of language acquisition, the effects of gender on these relations will be examined.
It is no use indicting the capitalist system.
Some of those cases have involved an individual accused, but others have involved the increasing practice of indicting large groups of accused persons.
To-day we are more or less indicting him.
It is no good indicting people for being extravagant the year before last.
The world must respect warrants issued by that first chamber—we may call it a magistrates court or an indicting chamber.
Causing an upset would, of course, include indicting leading members of the regime.