Arraign vs Denounce - What's the difference?
arraign | denounce | Synonyms |
To officially charge someone in a court of law.
To call to account, or accuse, before the bar of reason, taste, or any other tribunal.
* Dryden
* I. Taylor
(obsolete) To make known in a formal manner; to proclaim; to announce; to declare.
*, II.35:
*
To criticize or speak out against (someone or something); to point out as deserving of reprehension or punishment, etc.; to openly accuse or condemn in a threatening manner; to invoke censure upon; to stigmatize; to blame.
* 2013 May 23, (Sarah Lyall), "
To make a formal or public accusation against; to inform against; to accuse.
(obsolete) To proclaim in a threatening manner; to threaten by some outward sign or expression; make a menace of.
To announce the termination of; especially a treaty or armistice.
As verbs the difference between arraign and denounce
is that arraign is to officially charge someone in a court of law while denounce is to make known in a formal manner; to proclaim; to announce; to declare.As a noun arraign
is arraignment.arraign
English
Verb
(en verb)- They will not arraign you for want of knowledge.
- It is not arrogance, but timidity, of which the Christian body should now be arraigned by the world.
References
denounce
English
Verb
(denounc)- Nero .
- to denounce someone as a swindler, or as a coward
British Leader’s Liberal Turn Sets Off a Rebellion in His Party," New York Times (retrieved 29 May 2013):
- Mr. Cameron had a respite Thursday from the negative chatter swirling around him when he appeared outside 10 Downing Street to denounce the murder a day before of a British soldier on a London street.
- to denounce a confederate in crime
- to denounce someone to the authorities
- to denounce''' war; to '''denounce punishment