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43
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Asked on November 7, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on November 6, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on November 6, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on November 6, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on November 6, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on November 6, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on November 6, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on November 6, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on November 5, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on November 4, 2021 in Single word requests.
In more colloquial terms you may say that you are passing the buck, laying the blame, or deflecting criticism.
While these phrases CAN be applied to the described situation, they don’t inherently imply that you are accusing the person who directly accused you (A blames B, so B blames A), and can be used in situations where B blames C, and imply that A’s accusation against B is invalid.
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes