be+at+fault
31fault|less — «FLT lihs», adjective. without a single fault or defect; free from blemish or error; perfect: »Faultless beauty is rare. Whoever thinks a faultless piece to see, Thinks what ne er was, nor is, nor e er shall be (Alexander Pope). SYNONYM(S):… …
32Fault — Fault, v. i. To err; to blunder, to commit a fault; to do wrong. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] If after Samuel s death the people had asked of God a king, they had not faulted. Latimer. [1913 Webster] …
33Fault-finding — Fault find ing, n. The act of finding fault or blaming; used derogatively. Also Adj. [1913 Webster] …
34Fault Lines (newsmagazine) — Fault Lines is a free newsmagazine published by the San Francisco Bay Area Independent Media Center. Fault Lines is produced and distributed by an all volunteer collective. The first issue was published in June 2004.External links*… …
35fault|find|ing — «FLT FYN dihng», noun, adjective. –n. the act of finding fault. –adj. finding fault; complaining; pointing out faults. SYNONYM(S): captious, critical …
36Fault-finder — Fault find er, n. One who makes a practice of discovering others faults and censuring them; a scold. [1913 Webster] …
37Fault line (disambiguation) — Fault line (or Faultline) may refer to: *Fault (geology), a rock fracture which show evidence of movement *Faultline Records, a record label *Faultline (musician), A Moniker for the British DJ, David Kosten …
38fault — s.m.inv. ES ingl. {{wmetafile0}} TS sport spec. nel tennis, colpo sbagliato, fallo {{line}} {{/line}} DATA: 1942. ETIMO: ingl. fault propr. difetto …
39Fault — [fɔ:lt] der; s, s <aus gleichbed. engl. fault, dies über fr. faute u. das Vulgärlat. zu lat. fallere »(eine Leistung) nicht erfüllen, enttäuschen«> Fehler, bes. beim Aufschlag im Tennis u. ↑Badminton (Sport) …
40fault line — fault′ line n. 1) gel the intersection of a geologic fault with the surface of the earth or other plane of reference 2) cvb a boundary between incompatible or irreconcilable beliefs, cultures, or the like • Etymology: 1865–70 …