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to complicit
adjective
Associated with or participating in an activity, especially one of a questionable nature.
synonyms
Exact(1)
He also stated, "I felt kind of responsible, you know, after two years it would be too sad to, to not give her at least a chance to stay smoke free" The man's comments suggest that his acceptance of new fatherhood values mediated and conflicted with his alignment to complicit masculinities.
Similar(59)
We need to refuse to stay complicit and refuse to stay passive when we hear it.
(We might be said to be complicit, to which I'd sigh, and respond: yes, that's correct).
Rather, it's a demonstration of what it looks like to be complicit, to provide cover for someone because they were a good person in your presence.
We must acknowledge that to be silent is to agree, to be complicit.
They are using state resources to carry out unwanted, unnecessary and expensive procedures that require everyone from the anaesthetist to nurses to senior doctors to be complicit.
But he adds that he is pursuing his case because he wants the British government to admit to its complicit links with the Gaddafi regime.
He added: "I don't want to be accused of trying to influence, nor do I want to be complicit if they choose to do it".
We have to be made to feel complicit, and we're not in Polly Findlay's fluid revival.
It was Castro's special genius to entice Cubans to be complicit in these human rights crimes.
However, we (Nigerians) as a society do not need to wait for a woman to be violently assaulted sexually to be complicit in the act of rape.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com