different between incitement vs offence
incitement
English
Alternative forms
- encitement
Etymology
From French incitement, from Latin incit?mentum (“incentive; incitement”), from incit? (“urge; quicken; incite”, verb). Equivalent to incite +? -ment.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?n?sa?t.m?nt/
Noun
incitement (plural incitements)
- A call to act; encouragement to act, often in an illegal fashion.
Translations
incitement From the web:
- what incitement of insurrection mean
- what incitement means
- what does incitement mean
- what is incitement in law
- what is incitement to violence
- what is incitement speech
- what is incitement to imminent lawless action
- what is incitement of resurrection
offence
English
Noun
offence (countable and uncountable, plural offences)
- Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada standard spelling of offense.
Translations
offence From the web:
- what offence means
- what offences get the death penalty
- what offences can be tried by a military court
- what offence is a dui
- what offences go on criminal record
- what offences go on criminal record qld
- what offences are on the barred list
- what offences go on criminal record nsw
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