English edit

Adjective edit

complicitous (comparative more complicitous, superlative most complicitous)

  1. Complicit.
    • 1959, “Developments in the Law: Criminal Conspiracy,”, in Harvard Law Review, volume 72, number 5, page 994:
      In still other cases in which courts have spoken of a conspirator's responsibility for another's acts, the facts clearly show a complicitous relationship.
    • 2005, Ilan Kapoor, “Participatory Development, Complicity and Desire,”, in Third World Quarterly, volume 26, number 8, page 1215:
      This is why it is too easy and convenient to blame contemporary empire building on transnational corporations or the Bush/Blair administrations alone; the latter may well be more powerfully complicitous, but this is no reason for us to claim innocence and neutrality.

References edit

  • Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., 1989.
  • Random House Webster's Unabridged Electronic Dictionary, 1987-1996.