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Discover LudwigThe phrase "blameworthy for" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it when referring to someone or something that is responsible for a negative outcome or something that someone should be held accountable for. For example: "The board members were deemed blameworthy for the company's financial losses."
Exact(22)
We should do this because we're 'worth it' – the implication being that if we don't, we are culpable and blameworthy for 'letting ourselves go'," she says.
Jimmie Patterson, who plays Pontius Pilate, discussed the degree to which his character, whom he compared to a judge, was blameworthy for sentencing an innocent man to death.
Margaret Talbot (June 29) gets it right when she points out that exempting the mentally retarded from execution leaves behind others who are arguably even less blameworthy for their crimes.
Liz Dux, a lawyer who represents 44 people who say they were abused at Stoke Mandeville, said: "As an institution, Stoke Mandeville, in my opinion, is actually the most blameworthy for Savile's crimes.
Here is a table from their study: So an objective assessment (yes, the authors did control for several non-party factors that would have skewed the results in favour of the Democrats) seems to belie Republican claims about Democrats being blameworthy for economic troubles afflicting blacks.
Are such women responsible and/or blameworthy for contributing to their own oppression?
Similar(37)
But in more recent times, theories of moral responsibility have been developed that explain how and why it is that a person might be morally responsible--and so praiseworthy or blameworthy--for things over which she did not exercise any voluntary control.
During the event, she said: "It has been both unfortunate and unfair for HIV infection to be considered a shameful disease, for people living with HIV to be judged as blameworthy, and for AIDS to be equated with certain death.
However it may be possible to excuse these from blame without accepting that noncompliance with reasons is a necessary condition for blameworthiness; for example, with the weaker condition that a blameworthy act stems from having a character from which certain concerns or motivations are absent (Arpaly 2003).
As the ratings agency Moody worries that the debacle has "tarnished" India's image, commentators here angrily hunt for blameworthy politicians and officials over what they call "national shame".
The remainder of Aristotle's discussion is devoted to spelling out the conditions under which it is appropriate to hold a moral agent blameworthy or praiseworthy for some particular action or trait.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com