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"culpably" Definitions
  1. in a way for which somebody is responsible and deserves blame

36 Sentences With "culpably"

How to use culpably in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "culpably" and check conjugation/comparative form for "culpably". Mastering all the usages of "culpably" from sentence examples published by news publications.

" His colleague Dr. Anderson says it is "culpably unwarranted delay.
And we would have been culpably negligent as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said, we would've been 'culpably negligent' had we not recommend to the president that he take this action on Qassim Suleimani.
And we would have been culpably negligent, as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of staff said, we would have been culpably negligent had we not recommended to the president he take this action on Qassim Suleimani.
"We would be culpably negligent" if we didn't take action, he said.
CA Immo said it was severely damaged by unlawful and culpably biased influence on the best bidder procedure.
The Austrian group said it was severely damaged by unlawful and culpably biased influence on the best bidder procedure.
Try again to make him understand his error; try to get the other members of your family to see that by going along, they're culpably complicit.
Your actions are culpably wrong-headed and can only be corrected by ceasing and desisting from any further interference with employees and the business of the company.
"This was gonna happen and American lives were at risk and we would've been culpably negligent ... had we not recommended (to) the President that he take this action," Pompeo said.
Prof Beard, a Cambridge classicist and leading authority on Roman history, said she was "culpably laid back" about the crumbling of houses and walls, insisting they must not be restricted to academics.
But it is a conservative error, naïve or culpably ignorant, to act disappointed that black Americans aren't attracted to a coalition led by a barely-repentant "birther" who flirts with white supremacists.
Later in the briefing, when Pompeo was asked to provide his definition of the word "imminent," he contended that administration officials "would have been culpably negligent had we not recommended to the president that he take this action" against Soleimani.
No, but he was planning, coordinating and synchronizing significant combat operations against US military forces in the region and it was imminent," he said, adding that "we would have been culpably negligent to the American people had we not made the decision we made.
No, but he was planning, coordinating and synchronizing significant combat operations against US military forces in the region and it was imminent," he said, adding that "we would have been culpably negligent to the American people had we not made the decision we made.
They will charge us with having culpably allowed the destruction of some of those records of Creation which we had it in our power to preserve; and while professing to regard every living thing as the direct handiwork and best evidence of a Creator, yet, with a strange inconsistency, seeing many of them perish irrecoverably from the face of the earth, uncared for and unknown.
On Wellman's view, punishment is permissible in cases where the wrongdoer has forfeited her right against punishment by culpably violating (or at least attempting to violate) the rights of others.
The material liability of the employee is governed by the provisions of Art. 203-212 of the Labour Code. The employee shall be liable with its assets, if he has culpably caused material damage to the employer while fulfilling his work obligations. These are the principles of economic and production risk.
The critical circumstances had to have been of the employer's making; in addition, the employer had to be to blame, culpably responsible in some way, for the intolerable conditions. The conduct had to have lacked "reasonable and proper cause."Para 13. There could be little doubt in Cameron's mind that, when the appellant had resigned his position at work, it had been intolerable.
On 26 December 1922, the reparations commission formally found that Germany had culpably failed to comply with its obligations concerning the delivery of wood, against the vote of the British commissioner. Similarly, it found on 9 January 1923 that the 1922 deliveries of coal to France had been deficient. Two days later French and Belgian troops occupied the Ruhr. This caused outrage among the German public, media and political circles.
EMI's production team had favoured strings over woodwinds and voices but not culpably so, and had achieved an audio quality commendable for "its clarity, its warmth and beauty of sound and its exceedingly wide dynamic range". The album, in short, was "splendid". Goodfriend, James, Stereo Review, March 1980, p. 100 Mary Garden in the American première's tower scene J. B. Steane reviewed the album on LP in Gramophone in April 1980.
Bartetzko was arrested several days after the bombing. He was charged with murder, attempted murder and terrorism. He was the first Westerner to be charged with murder in post-war Kosovo. In 2001, Bartetzko was discharged from the Bundeswehr under Paragraph 55 (5) of the Soldiers' Act, which is enforced when a soldier has "culpably violated their duty to serve" or "seriously endangered the military order or the reputation of the Bundeswehr".
In R v K, an important case in South African criminal law, the Appellate Division held that, in cases of private defence, the assault on the accused need not be committed culpably. It is also possible to act in private defence against someone who lacks criminal capacity, such as a mentally disordered person. Centlivres CJ compared359. the law in South Africa with what Holmes J said in Brown v United States:256 USR 335.
According to Rummel, democide requires governmental intention. But he was also interested in analyzing the effects of regimes that unintentionally, yet culpably, cause the deaths of their citizens through negligence, incompetence or sheer indifference. An example is a regime in which corruption has become so pervasive and destructive of a people's welfare that it threatens their daily lives and reduces their life expectancy. Rummel termed deaths of citizens under such regimes as mortacide.
It was alleged by the Earl of Newport that he was willing to transfer his allegiance once more to the parliament. It is not likely that he meditated open treason, but he was culpably negligent and occupied with private ambitions and jealousies. He was still engaged in desultory operations against Taunton when the main campaign of 1645 opened. For the part taken by Goring's army in the operations of the Naseby campaign see First English Civil War: Naseby Campaign.
In December 2014, Waldmann starred in the Orange's Tree production of Widowers' Houses Waldmann played the doctor, Harry Trench. Dominic Cavendish commented that "Alex Waldmann exudes bluff, wide-eyed likeability as Harry Trench, the young gentleman who falls for Sartorius's daughter only to (briefly) recoil on learning of this self-made man's insalubrious source of income, but his dawning cynicism needs to come at more evident personal cost." Michael Billington felt that there was "There is lively support from Alex Waldmann as the culpably naive Trench". Paul Taylor in the Independent described Waldmann as "excellent".
The bombastic nature of Ramesses's version has long been recognized.Some of the harshest criticism of Ramesses has come from Egyptologists. "It is all too clear that he was a stupid and culpably inefficient general and that he failed to gain his objectives at Kadesh" (John A. Wilson, The Culture of Ancient Egypt (1951) p. 247. However, Wilson recognises the personal bravery of Ramesses and the improvement of his skills in subsequent campaigns.) The Egyptian version of the battle is recorded in two primary forms, known as the Poem and the Bulletin.
These faculties are valid from the date when they were granted in the Roman Curia. In actual practice they do not expire, as a rule, at the death of the pope nor of the bishop to whom they were given, but pass on to those who take his place (the vicar capitular, the administrator or succeeding bishop). Faculties granted for a fixed period of time, or a limited number of cases, cease when the period or number has been reached; but while awaiting their renewal the bishop, unless culpably negligent, may continue to use them provisionally. A bishop can use his habitual faculties only in favour of his own subjects.
His only son Oliver De Lancey was born in Guernsey in 1803. On 1 January 1801 he was promoted lieutenant-general, but in November 1804 the commissioners of military inquiry found serious mistakes in his barrack accounts, and defalcations amounting to many thousands of pounds. He was removed from his post as barrack-master-general, but in spite of the violent attacks of the opposition, headed on this question by John Calcraft, he was not prosecuted, and was treated rather as having been culpably careless than actually fraudulent. To raise this money he was forced to sell his estate, but he remained a member of the consolidated board of general officers, and was promoted general on 1 January 1812,.
Steel and Morris were found liable on several points, but the judge also found some of the points in the factsheet were true. McDonald's considered this a legal victory, though it was tempered by the judge's endorsement of some of the allegations in the sheet. Specifically, Bell J ruled that McDonald's endangered the health of their workers and customers by "misleading advertising", that they "exploit children", that they were "culpably responsible" in the infliction of unnecessary cruelty to animals, and they were "antipathetic" to unionisation and paid their workers low wages. Furthermore, although the decision awarded £60,000 to the company, McDonald's legal costs were much greater, and the defendants lacked the funds to pay it.
Master to blame for ferry running on to rocks at zoo The Daily Telegraph On 11 October 2010 at 08:47 the HarbourCat ferry Anne Sergeant ran into the Kirribilli Jeffrey Street wharf. One passenger was taken to hospital with some other passengers receiving minor injuries. On 7 November 2010, at approximately 16:30, a speedboat crashed into the Fantasea Spirit (owned and operated by Palm Beach Ferries, operating for Sydney Ferries) 100m from Meadowbank wharf on the Parramatta River, injuring six people. The skipper of the speedboat, a 49-year-old Dundas man, was charged with culpably navigating in a dangerous manner causing grievous bodily harm (GBH) and operating a recreational vessel negligently causing death or GBH.
"Harry Elmer Barnes as Revisionist of the Cold War." Rothbard's endorsing of World War II revisionism and his association with Barnes and other Holocaust deniers have drawn criticism from within the political right. Kevin D. Williamson wrote an opinion piece published by National Review which condemned Rothbard for "making common cause with the 'revisionist' historians of the Third Reich", a term he used to describe American Holocaust deniers associated with Rothbard, such as James J. Martin of the Institute for Historical Review. The piece also characterized "Rothbard and his faction" as being "culpably indulgent" of Holocaust denial, the view which "specifically denies that the Holocaust actually happened or holds that it was in some way exaggerated".
Israeli Government officials, upon being notified of the unauthorized breach, immediately ordered Warren's Gate sealed. The 2,000-year-old stone gate was filled with cement, and remains cemented shut today.Abraham Rabinovich, Tunnel vision. Archaeologist Léon Pressouyre, a UNESCO envoy who visited the site in 1998 and claims to have been prevented from meeting Israeli officials (in his own words, "Mr Avi Shoket, Israel's permanent delegate to UNESCO, had repeatedly opposed my mission and, when I expressed the wish to meet with his successor, Uri Gabay, I was denied an appointment"),Omayma Abdel-Latif, "Revoking the death warrant" accuses the Israeli government of culpably neglecting to protect the Islamic period buildings uncovered in Israeli excavations.
In the mid-1970s Peden took up writing. His first book, Fall of an Arrow, was published in 1978, and was one of the earliest book-length accounts of the development and cancellation of the Avro Canada CF-105 Arrow project. In the book, Peden argued against the Diefenbaker government's decision to cancel the Arrow project, although he suggested that had the government of the time been Liberal, it too would have likely cancelled the plane. He described the decision as "among the most serious mistakes made by a Canadian politician in peacetime, and it was based upon a culpably restricted assessment of some of the most important factors in the situation."Murray Peden, Fall of an Arrow (Stittsville: Canada's Wings, 1978) p. 133.
To the fireman's credit he did act decisively when he spotted the Slough East home signal at danger; but it was one of his duties to "carefully observe all signals" which he did not do earlier. The guard claimed that he was too busy attending to luggage and mailbags to look out for signals; his priorities were supported by the officers of the company but the enquiry pointed out that according to the regulations the "safe working of the train" should have been his first consideration. Inquests held at Slough and Paddington absolved the driver of blame, but the jury at Windsor found him culpably negligent; he was charged with manslaughter and sent for trial at Reading assizes where the jury verdict of not guilty was met with cheers from the public gallery.
Justice Blackmun's concurring opinion went further by saying that the government was responsible for the conditions inside, regardless of a prison or government official's subjective state of mind: > Where a legislature refuses to fund a prison adequately, the resulting > barbaric conditions should not be immune from constitutional scrutiny simply > because no prison official acted culpably....The responsibility for > subminimal conditions in any prison inevitably is diffuse, and often borne > at least in part, by the legislature. Yet, regardless of what state actor or > institution caused the harm and with what intent, the experience of the > inmate is the same. A punishment is simply no less cruel or unusual because > its harm is unintended. In view of this obvious fact, there is no reason to > believe that, in adopting the Eighth Amendment, the Framers intended to > prohibit cruel and unusual punishments only when they were inflicted > intentionally.
108 Innocent then called for a new crusade: > Thus the King of kings, our Lord Jesus Christ, who brought body and soul and > other goods to you, will condemn you for the vice of ingratitude and the > crime of infidelity if you should fail to aid him with the result that he > lost his kingdom that he brought with the price of his blood. Know then that > whoever denies aid to the Redeemer in this time of his need is culpably > harsh and harshly culpable. For, also, insofar as, according to the divine > command, he loves his neighbor as himself and for him, he knows that this > brethren in faith and in the Christian name are imprisoned by the faithless > Saracens in a cruel prison and endure the harsh yoke of slavery, he does not > expend the efficacious work for their liberation, that the Lord spoke of in > the Gospel. "Do to others whatever you wish them to do to you".

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