Incuso, incusas, incolâre. Pla. To accuse: to blame: to finde fault with.Quid me incusas Clitipho? Ferent.Wherein doest thou finde faulte with me.-eadem omnia Quæ tute du lum coram me incusaueras. Ter. All the same thinges which thou layedst to my charge and blamed me for euen now before him.Incusabo re probri. Plau. I will lay dishonestie to thy charge.Voce magna incusat Latinum. Vir. Querelis incusat fata.Stat.He complaineth of his fortune & destinie.Intemperiem cœli incusantes. Corn. Tac. Excusing themselfe by the vnseasonable weather.Incusatio. onis, f. g. Verbal. Cic.A blaming.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
incūso, āvi, ātum, āre, v. a. [in-causa], to accuse one of something, to complain of, find fault with, blame (cf.: arguo, accuso, vitupero; class., but not in Cic.).—Constr. aliquem alicujus rei, aliquem quod, aliquid, etc.—With acc. of person: qui alterum incusat probri, Plaut. Truc. 1, 2, 58: te ipse jure optumo merito incuses licet, id. Most. 3, 2, 24: aliquem luxūs et superbiae, Tac. A. 2, 78: vehementer eos incusavit, quod, Caes. B. G. 1, 40; 2, 15; Verg. A. 11, 471.— With acc. of the thing (post-class.), Liv. 1, 9, 13; 8, 23, 4: factum alicujus, Ov. R. Am. 479: angustias stipendii, duritiam operum,
to complain of
, Tac. A. 1, 35: casus, id. ib. 6, 23.—With acc. and inf.: incusaverat bella ex bellis seri, Liv. 31, 6, 4; 26, 12, 11; 33, 35, 11: cum Poenus dolo dimissum Romanum incusaret, id. 24, 1, 10; cf. pass., with nom. and inf., Amm. 14, 11, 24.—In part. pass.: incūsātus, a, um, complained of, found fault with: sterilitas cacuminis jure incusata, Col. 3, 17, 3: in Augusto incusatae liberorum mortes,