List of synonyms from "impartial" to synonyms from "impeachment"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms impassible, impassable, impatient, impeachment, imparting and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « impeachment »
- As in indictment : noun accusation
- As in lawsuit : noun case brought to court
- As in arraignment : noun accusation
- As in trial : noun legal proceeding
- As in blame : noun condemnation
- As in accusation : noun charge of wrongdoing, fault
- As in true bill : noun grand jury indictment
- As in incrimination : noun accusation
- As in reprehension : noun blame
- As in reprobation : noun blame
- As in deposition : noun dethroning, ousting
- In the Andrew Johnson impeachment case was it not better that things were as they were?
- Extract from : « 'Tis Sixty Years Since » by Charles Francis Adams
- That fat fool Albemarle had swallowed my impeachment like a draught of muscadine.
- Extract from : « Mistress Wilding » by Rafael Sabatini
- "Ah, no," she pleaded—she knew how true was the impeachment.
- Extract from : « Mistress Wilding » by Rafael Sabatini
- He admitted the impeachment in the midst of his astonishment with an abruptness equal to her own.
- Extract from : « The Golden Woman » by Ridgwell Cullum
- The Commons insisted on carrying his impeachment to the bar of the Lords.
- Extract from : « History of the English People, Volume VI (of 8) » by John Richard Green
- The foundations of the Impeachment were shown to be too slender.
- Extract from : « History of the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson, President of The United States » by Edmund G. Ross
- His essay on the Impeachment of Warren Hastings shows this trait.
- Extract from : « Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 10 » by Charles Herbert Sylvester
- For one impeachment of the slave system, a thousand defences are made.
- Extract from : « No Compromise with Slavery » by William Lloyd Garrison
- The Tenure-of-Office Act furnished the pretext for impeachment.
- Extract from : « The New Nation » by Frederic L. Paxson
- They began to talk of impeachment in 1866, but could find no basis for it.
- Extract from : « The New Nation » by Frederic L. Paxson