/aˈkuzi/
OriginDerived from Latin accūsāre (“to call to account, make complaint against, reproach”), from ad- (“with regard to”) + causa (“a cause; a lawsuit”). Compare French accuser and Italian accusare. Doublet of kaŭzi.
- transitiveto accuse, charge with, indict for
“Vi nenion gajnas akuzante aliajn pri viaj malsukcesoj.” — You won't gain anything by accusing others of your failures.
Formsakuzas(present) · akuzis(past) · akuzos(future) · akuzus(conditional) · akuzu(volitive) · akuzanta(active, participle, present, singular) · akuzantaj(active, participle, plural, present) · akuzinta(active, participle, past, singular) · akuzintaj(active, participle, past, plural) · akuzonta(active, future, participle, singular) · akuzontaj(active, future, participle, plural) · akuzantan(accusative, active, participle, present, singular) · akuzantajn(accusative, active, participle, plural, present) · akuzintan(accusative, active, participle, past, singular) · akuzintajn(accusative, active, participle, past, plural) · akuzontan(accusative, active, future, participle, singular) · akuzontajn(accusative, active, future, participle, plural) · akuzata(participle, passive, present, singular) · akuzataj(participle, passive, plural, present) · akuzita(participle, passive, past, singular)