Accuse
in sentence
167 examples of Accuse in a sentence
But the franc was so strong, even at the new rate set in September 2011, that no one can
accuse
the Swiss National Bank of unfair undervaluation.
But it is surprising when these people
accuse
participants in the Prague Spring and the democratic opposition of links with communism.
The political/ecological crisis in the oil-producing communities of the Niger River delta threatens to spin out of control as irate youth and impoverished women
accuse
the oil companies and state officials of despoiling their habitat and taking their oil without giving back much in return.
After all, judging by his past behavior, it seems likely that he will
accuse
China of currency manipulation, regardless of the policy path it chooses: a completely free float with full convertibility, the current managed float, or a pegged exchange rate.
Many Sunnis, for example,
accuse
America of favoritism: the United States intervenes to protect Kurds, Yazidis, and Christians in northern Iraq, they say, but does little to stop the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of Sunnis in Syria.
This stance led many to
accuse
the ECB of exceeding its mandate and violating European treaties.
Meanwhile, Trump will continue to
accuse
China of manipulating its exchange rate, ignoring the recent downward pressure on the renminbi (which indicates that the currency was actually overvalued), not to mention the simple fact that many governments intervene to manage their exchange rates.
Predictably, he fares as poorly with religious leaders, some of whom
accuse
him of blasphemy.
But, worried that the US authorities would
accuse
it of attempting to control a new market, IBM left the Disk Operating System (DOS) for the new PCs to a tiny new company that no one saw as a threat: Microsoft.
Moreover, a substantial portion of the broader anti-liberal left, composed of communists, ecologists, union activists, and adherents of the movement Attac
accuse
the reformists of subordinating themselves to liberal globalization and advocate, instead, a radical transformation of society and the economy.
Groups of “fighters for the revolution” – in reality, the Cuban secret police – brutally attack their political opponents and
accuse
them of absurd crimes in an effort to intimidate them or to force them to emigrate.
This gives political succor to those who
accuse
Rouhani of being naive to hope that the international community would welcome a more open Iran.
Indeed, today the global economy’s arsonists have become prosecutors, and
accuse
the fire fighters of having provoked flooding.
Male students from Islamabad’s many madrasas are even more active in terrorizing video shop owners, whom they
accuse
of spreading pornography.
The bad news is that the vast majority of market analysts, still clinging to the old monetarist framework, will
accuse
the Fed of “falling behind the curve” by letting US unemployment decline too far and failing to anticipate the threat of rising inflation.
Predictably, some
accuse
Google of seeking to impose its own values on a foreign culture.
That is why Saudi Arabia – along with Bahrain, Egypt, and the United Arab Emirates – recently cut diplomatic ties and trade links with Qatar, which they
accuse
of destabilizing the region by supporting both Iranian proxies and the Sunni militants of al-Qaeda and ISIS.
Trump would likely then
accuse
Kim of betraying his trust.
They
accuse
Thaksin, Thailand’s wealthiest businessman, of corruption and treason for the tax-free sale of his family-owned Shin Corporation to the Singapore government’s Temasek Holdings for $1.9 billion.
Trump and his fellow Republicans will
accuse
congressional Democrats of delaying a rescue package, and Democratic governors of flubbing their responses to the crisis.
But the United States has also meddled in other countries’ affairs, so that the Kremlin can always
accuse
it of applying a double standard.
That plays into the hands of fundamentalists and extremists, who
accuse
Western governments of preaching human rights and equality before the law only when it suits them.
Never did it occur to anyone to label Ebola the “African virus,” or to
accuse
the WHO of neglect and malfeasance.
In the election campaign, Johnson would
accuse
Parliament of thwarting “the will of the people,” meaning the narrow 2016 vote to leave the EU.
By portraying sanctions as foreign aggression and economic warfare against their country, authoritarian regimes often
accuse
human-rights activists of being allied with the enemy.
Regarding the Navalny poisoning, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov insists that there are “no grounds to
accuse
the Russian state” of being involved.
Advisers, he added, could always go to the newsstand and buy a copy – “I hope they don’t
accuse
me of censorship” – but no public funds would be spent on it.
The historian Margaret MacMillan concludes her analysis of the world’s march to war in 1914 with a crucial message: “[I]f we want to point fingers from the twenty-first century, we can
accuse
those who took Europe into war of two things.
The reformist government overcomes grueling fights with legislators and civil society, who
accuse
it of putting investors’ interest ahead of those of its own people.
This reform was initiated by Japarov himself, prompting his opponents to
accuse
him of attempting to usurp power and divert the country from the path of democracy.
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