Similar words: criminalistics, criminalisation, criminality, criminalize, decriminalize, criminalization, decriminalization, criminal. Meaning: v. declare illegal; outlaw.
Random good picture Not show
1. There is no move to criminalise alcohol.
2. Why, in short, was it necessary to criminalise and terrorise our entire community?
3. However, what differentiated the suffragettes much more sharply and significantly from their criminal sisters was their resistance to criminalising.
4. Criminalising them would cover trivial matters, such as neighbours quarrelling over a lawnmower.
5. The new law would criminalise the oblivious as well.
6. The new law would criminalise oblivious as well.
7. One is that it makes no sense to criminalise hard - working families.
8. Illustrators fret it will be used to criminalise the content itself.
9. There is the danger that young people become permanently criminalised.
9. Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
10. Its proposed abolition and replacement with more punitive measures would further criminalise travellers for their way of life.
11. Amnesty International, which released the leaked document, reckons that the wording is so sweeping that it would “in effect criminalise legitimate dissent.
12. Chinese legal experts are drawing up proposals for the country's first animal welfare law, which could criminalise the brutal culling of dogs and other forms of pet maltreatment.
More similar words: criminalistics, criminalisation, criminality, criminalize, decriminalize, criminalization, decriminalization, criminal, criminally, criminal law, criminal court, criminal record, criminal negligence, criminate, incriminate, recriminate, discriminant, incriminating, discriminate, incrimination, recrimination, discrimination, indiscriminate, discriminative, discriminating, discriminatory, self-incrimination, undiscriminating, indiscriminately, finalise.