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Crossword clues for offence

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
offence
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a criminal offence/act (=a crime)
▪ Cruelty to animals is a criminal offence.
a driving offence (=an action that breaks the laws on driving)
▪ He had to appear in court for a driving offence.
a drug offence (=a crime related to having or selling drugs)
▪ Luciani is serving 20 years for drug offences.
a serious crime/offence
▪ Kidnapping is a serious crime.
alleged offence/crime/incident etc
▪ their alleged involvement in international terrorism
▪ The alleged victim made the complaint at a police station in York.
cause offence/embarrassment (=offend/embarrass someone)
▪ How can I refuse the invitation without causing offence?
commit a crime/offence
▪ People who commit crimes end up in jail.
compound a crime/an offence etc
▪ He compounded the offence by calling his opponents liars.
mean no harm/offence/disrespect (=not intend to harm, offend etc someone)
▪ I’m sure he didn’t mean any harm.
motoring offences
▪ He was found guilty of 14 motoring offences.
punishable offence
▪ a punishable offence
statutory offence
take offence (=feel offended)
▪ Don’t take offence. Roger says things like that to everybody.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
alleged
▪ No plea was taken from Mr. Bell in respect of the alleged offence of drunk and disorderly behaviour.
▪ He may still plead not guilty while admitting that he is the person concerned in the alleged offence.
arrestable
▪ Further detention can only be authorised in the case of a person who is suspected of having committed a serious arrestable offence.
bookable
▪ Derby's Coleman was sent off late for his second bookable offence.
▪ Middlesbrough fans feared the worst when central defender Nicky Mohan was sent off for a second bookable offence.
capital
▪ The word from Lilongwe now is that Chihana will be charged with sedition, a capital offence.
▪ Loss of privileges in peacetime; in war, a capital offence.
criminal
▪ Water was so scarce that lawn-sprinkling in the suburbs became a criminal offence.
▪ Eviction without a court order is a criminal offence.
▪ Thus he may decide that although the investigation discloses a criminal offence, no action should be taken in the criminal courts.
▪ From next month, it will be a criminal offence to give false or misleading descriptions of property for sale.
▪ Also, falsely describing goods can amount to a criminal offence under the Trades Description Act 1968.
▪ Failure to comply with this requirement is also a criminal offence.
▪ He had never been charged with any criminal offence.
guilty
▪ He was guilty of this offence when he used the car for his own purposes the following day.
▪ Indeed, it would seem that members of the same family who quarrel in the garden may be guilty of the offence.
▪ He was adjudged guilty of the offence of obstruction.
lesser
▪ Indecency in public displays is and should remain a separate if lesser offence.
▪ His state of mind will help to determine whether he is guilty of murder or the lesser offence of manslaughter.
▪ Or would it be fairer to convict the harm-doer of a lesser offence, thus ignoring the chance result?
▪ If it results in young Pardy being charged with a lesser offence, Deanes will be highly satisfied.
▪ However, of these, 42 percent. pleaded guilty to a lesser offence such as indecent assault.
minor
▪ Section 5 of the Act creates a relatively minor offence which is likely to be of considerable practical significance.
▪ If he didn't want to go to court for a very minor offence, then you could caution him.
new
▪ The new sequence begins with a provocation which, if well directed, generates a new offence from the provoked teacher.
▪ The new offence becomes the occasion for another and now legitimized act of retribution.
▪ The new offence in the Aggravated Vehicle-Taking Bill 1991-1992 raises familiar issues associated with hastily conceived legislation.
▪ Two characteristics of the new offence deserve special attention.
▪ The more important elements of the definition of the new offence are referred to in paragraphs 34-58.
▪ This is not a new offence.
▪ A new general offence of giving a misleading price indication is provided in s20.
▪ Indeed, as the new offence is defined, it creates what is essentially a statutory form of assault.
punishable
▪ Any lying by the debtor during the examination constitutes perjury, which is a serious and punishable offence.
▪ Respirators were a nuisance; it was a punishable offence for any member of the armed forces to be caught without one.
serious
▪ Any lying by the debtor during the examination constitutes perjury, which is a serious and punishable offence.
▪ He justifies this view on the ground that rape is a very serious offence to which serious penalties attach.
▪ Dismissal following automatically if a third serious offence was committed.
▪ Further detention can only be authorised in the case of a person who is suspected of having committed a serious arrestable offence.
▪ Jailing Murray, Lord Kirkwood described the charge he had been convicted of as a very serious offence.
▪ If, however, their conduct is itself disorderly, they may commit the less serious offence.
▪ This was a serious offence, and she was dismissed.
▪ His most serious offence in that time was taking part in a robbery while armed with a crossbow.
statutory
▪ That is a statutory offence or, more bluntly put, a criminal offence.
▪ It created a statutory offence of riot - 12 or more people using or threatening violence for an unlawful purpose.
■ VERB
avoid
▪ A disclaimer is an obvious and simple device for a trader to use to avoid committing an offence.
▪ The archbishop came back under papal orders to avoid giving offence to the king.
▪ As it was, it was impossible for even the most servile and well-meaning to avoid offence.
▪ But what is to be done by the honest car dealer, i.e. the man who wishes to avoid committing an offence?
▪ The only defence is that the estate agent took all reasonable steps and exercised all due diligence to avoid committing the offence.
carry
▪ He risks being charged with an offence that carries up to five years in jail.
▪ A second offence carries a life ban.
▪ Conviction for such an offence carries a five-year prison sentence.
▪ There is the offence of being carried.
▪ This is an indictable offence which carries a two years' prison sentence.
▪ Section 4 makes it an offence to carry on investment business in contravention of section 3.
▪ That offence carries a maximum sentence of 10 years, the same period as appears in this mutiny Bill.
▪ This offence carries a power of arrest for a constable who witnesses the obstruction.
cause
▪ This does not mean that we shall shy away from tackling difficult subjects that may cause offence.
▪ They believe music causes less offence to the listener than direct speech.
▪ On the down side, domestic broadcasters decided to ban any songs or plays that could cause offence.
▪ This appointment was apparently predetermined, and it caused some offence in the profession.
▪ To ignore this can cause great offence.
▪ Inconsiderate smoking can cause considerable offence to the majority of people who do not smoke.
▪ I quite understand that this implication has caused offence or distress to some people, for which I apologise.
▪ It was to cause enormous offence and rock the Empire.
charge
▪ He risks being charged with an offence that carries up to five years in jail.
▪ The boy, from Witham, Essex, is too young to be charged with a criminal offence.
▪ Thousands of their supporters were charged with the same offence.
▪ He had never been charged with any criminal offence.
▪ If it results in young Pardy being charged with a lesser offence, Deanes will be highly satisfied.
commit
▪ A youngster may have committed the offence only once.
▪ Did W commit an offence under section 1?
▪ So long as the defendant does not communicate his intention, he commits no offence.
▪ Any civil servant who talks to his or her spouse about work would be committing an offence.
▪ They are men who will have committed an offence within the confines of their family and community.
▪ It was when I was fifteen or sixteen that I committed my first big offence.
▪ The question is: have they on those facts alone committed an offence?
▪ The employer could still commit the offence of using, causing or permitting no insurance.
constitute
▪ Organising or participating in a march in breach of any such condition constitutes an offence.
▪ The official reason was that the painting was obscene and constituted an offence against religion.
▪ Publication to a single person is, impliedly, insufficient to constitute the offence.
▪ Development carried out in contravention of a stop notice constitutes an offence.
▪ Thus where the advertisement constitutes a criminal offence, it would seem pointless to complain to the Director General.
▪ Using a vehicle in contravention of the relevant statutory provisions constitutes a criminal offence.
▪ We might also note that what constitutes an offence in legal terms also changes over time.
convict
▪ That is, they must convict him of the offence which they think he probably did not commit.
create
▪ The whole phrase does not create more than one offence.
▪ Section 5 of the Act creates a relatively minor offence which is likely to be of considerable practical significance.
▪ Section 47 creates the offence of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
▪ Much depends upon the statute creating the offence.
▪ This creates an offence of assisting a drug trafficker to retain the benefits of his or her proceeds.
▪ Section 7 does not create an offence which can be the subject matter of an information.
▪ The Government says it will create a new offence of corporate killing.
▪ Section 7 does not create an offence.
give
▪ The King's religious policies, strictly applied by Archbishop Laud, gave offence to the Puritan merchants and artisans.
▪ Geoff gave no impression of offence having been transmitted or received.
▪ He would deck himself out in the kind of clothes that would give most offence to her were she alive.
▪ He was sensitive, vulnerable, amazed when his honest truths gave offence.
▪ No need to accept every one of the invitations which kept on being delivered because of Amabel's fear of giving offence.
▪ Glancing at her watch, she wondered if she could slip away soon without giving offence to Edward and Helen.
▪ He gave further offence to some when he edited the Star and Morning Leader from 1890 to 1898.
▪ The archbishop came back under papal orders to avoid giving offence to the king.
make
▪ Arrests were made under a state law which makes it a criminal offence to hide ones face at a protest.
▪ But section 2 of the 1911 Act went far beyond spying, making it an offence to disclose or receive official information.
▪ This probably changes the existing law, making the offence more difficult to prove.
▪ They are suggesting that you put country sports with child abuse and drink driving, to make it a criminal offence.
▪ We will make it an offence to supply anabolic steroids to minors.
▪ I know that there has been discussion in the House of Lords, but that makes the offence worse.
▪ Section 4 makes it an offence to carry on investment business in contravention of section 3.
▪ The Act makes it an absolute offence for a shopkeeper to sell cigarettes or any other tobacco product to young people.
take
▪ Corbett loved the brilliant logic delivered so tongue-in-cheek that only those who wished to take offence would be affronted.
▪ Poor Mrs Sugden considered we were being very superior, and took offence.
▪ Lane did not take offence at his boss's comment, nor did he slow down.
▪ It is music for the coach trade, at which only the most high-minded purist is likely to take offence.
▪ Would Bonaventure return or take offence at not being fed by him and disappear for ever into the stinking alleyways?
▪ No one will take offence and you might secure win: win.
▪ The driver would have known it was his first time, didn't take offence at the yelling.
▪ Will a merchant kinsman take offence if you buy goods from the co-op?
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
bookable offence
▪ Derby's Coleman was sent off late for his second bookable offence.
▪ Middlesbrough fans feared the worst when central defender Nicky Mohan was sent off for a second bookable offence.
capital offence/crime
▪ It is capital crime, and a black disgrace to the races of civilized mankind.
▪ Loss of privileges in peacetime; in war, a capital offence.
▪ New capital crimes would include the use of firearms; hostage-taking; torture; sale of drugs to minors and racketeering.
▪ No government has ever made abortion a capital crime or executed either a pregnant woman or an abortionist for murder.
▪ The word from Lilongwe now is that Chihana will be charged with sedition, a capital offence.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Bates is being tried for offences committed in the early 1990s.
▪ Davies claimed that he did not know he was committing an offence by accessing the website.
▪ Driving when drunk is a criminal offence.
▪ Hewson was arrested for a number of minor offences.
▪ It is an offence for a shopkeeper to sell alcohol to anyone under 18.
▪ Motorists can be fined on the spot for minor offences, such as speeding.
▪ Speeding offences are usually punishable by a fine.
▪ The bill seeks to make it a criminal offence to inflict cruelty on any animal.
▪ The number of women convicted of serious offences is still relatively small.
▪ Travelling on the train without a ticket is an offence.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A second offence carries a life ban.
▪ He attributed the offence to pressure from his friends to carry the scheme out, when it was thought up.
▪ He would deck himself out in the kind of clothes that would give most offence to her were she alive.
▪ It became an offence for anyone in charge of children to allow them to bet in public places or to enter brothels.
▪ It is an offence for companies to recruit a non-disabled worker when they are below the quota.
▪ Most of its historical anomalies survive in the present offence.
▪ That phrase is read narrowly to convict the accused of handling rather than theft, handling being a more serious offence than theft.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Offence

Offence \Of*fence"\, n. See Offense.

Offence

Offense \Of*fense"\, Offence \Of*fence"\, n. [F., fr. L. offensa. See Offend.]

  1. The act of offending in any sense; esp., a crime or a sin, an affront or an injury.

    Who was delivered for our offenses, and was raised again for our justification.
    --Rom. iv. 25.

    I have given my opinion against the authority of two great men, but I hope without offense to their memories.
    --Dryden.

  2. The state of being offended or displeased; anger; displeasure; as, to cause offense.

    He was content to give them just cause of offense, when they had power to make just revenge.
    --Sir P. Sidney.

  3. A cause or occasion of stumbling or of sin. [Obs.]

    Woe to that man by whom the offense cometh!
    --Matt. xviii. 7.

  4. In any contest, the act or process of attacking as contrasted with the act of defending; the offensive; as, to go on the offense.

  5. (Sports) The members of a team who have the primary responsibility to score goals, in contrast to those who have the responsibility to defend, i.e. to prevent the opposing team from scoring goal.

    Note: This word, like expense, is often spelled with a c. It ought, however, to undergo the same change with expense, the reasons being the same, namely, that s must be used in offensive as in expensive, and is found in the Latin offensio, and the French offense.

    To take offense, to feel, or assume to be, injured or affronted; to become angry or hostile.

    Weapons of offense, those which are used in attack, in distinction from those of defense, which are used to repel.

    Syn: Displeasure; umbrage; resentment; misdeed; misdemeanor; trespass; transgression; delinquency; fault; sin; crime; affront; indignity; outrage; insult.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
offence

see offense.

Wiktionary
offence

n. (standard spelling of offense from=British spelling English)

WordNet
offence
  1. n. the action of attacking an enemy [syn: offense, offensive]

  2. the team that has the ball (or puck) and is trying to score [syn: offense] [ant: defense, defense]

  3. a feeling of anger caused by being offended; "he took offence at my question" [syn: umbrage, offense]

  4. a lack of politeness; a failure to show regard for others; wounding the feelings or others [syn: discourtesy, offense, offensive activity]

  5. a crime less serious than a felony [syn: misdemeanor, misdemeanour, infraction, offense, violation, infringement]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "offence".

In his pastoral letter to his clergy urging them to take the oath of allegiance, Burnet grounded the claim of William and Mary on the right of conquest, a view which gave such offence that the pamphlet was burnt by the common hangman three years later.

The cruelties that accompany research will always accompany it, until all scientific experimentation upon animals is made a criminal offence.

In other words, every conceivable phase of scientific experimentation upon living creatures, even if absolutely painless, should be made a legal offence.

At the bar and in the senate of Rome the ablest orators were not apprehensive of giving offence to their hearers, by exposing that doctrine as an idle and extravagant opinion, which was rejected with contempt by every man of a liberal education and understanding.

In this morality female adultery is malversation by the woman and theft by the man, whilst male adultery with an unmarried woman is not an offence at all.

Therefore in his preaching, if the word used for the lofty, simple utterance of divine messengers, may without offence be misapplied to his paltry memorizations, his main thought was always whether the said lady was justly appreciating the eloquence and wisdom with which he meant to impress her--while in fact he remained incapable of understanding how deep her natural insight penetrated both him and his pretensions.

There were the Misses Twitchwell, one blonde, one redhead, who refused to take offence at his never being able to tell them apart.

For this offence the unfortunate husband was flung from the top of the campanile in Siena, during the Palio, by members of the family.

Each of them therefore now endeavoured, as much as he could, to palliate the offence which his own child had committed, and to aggravate the match of the other.

I was not less inured than the others to the war of offence and defence, but at last there was such a bitter joke played upon me that it suggested to me another, the fatal consequences of which put a stop to the mania by which we were all possessed.

Master Prout felt friendly to the publican, as was evident, there were some things he would not overlook, and no offence could be committed more heinous than disregarding his orders.

Damerel, quizzing him, but with such an understanding smile in his eves that Aubrey forbore to take offence.

Usually a comment like that would have been a shootable offence, but Spiro was in a good mood.

Finally, the injustice of the dogma of everlasting punishment is most emphatically shown by the fact that there is no sort of correspondence or possible proportion between the offence and the penalty, between the moment of sinning life and the eternity of suffering death.

Humbled by a public confession, emaciated by fasting and clothed in sackcloth, the penitent lay prostrate at the door of the assembly, imploring with tears the pardon of his offences, and soliciting the prayers of the faithful.